Literary Terms



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Literary Terms

Literary Terms


Alliteration – The repetition of the initial sounds (usually consonants) of stressed


syllables neighboring words or at short intervals within a line or passage,
usually at word beginnings, as in “wild and woolly”
He clasps the crag with crooked hands. (Tennyson)

Allegory – a story in which persons, places and things form a system of clearly labeled equivalents, in other words, each represents something else.


Young Goodman Brown by Nathaniel Hawthorne is an allegory.

Allusion - An implied or indirect reference to something assumed to be known, such as


a historical event or person, a well-known quotation from literature, or a
famous work of art.
Or like stout Cortez when with eagle eyes
He stared at the Pacific…(Keats)


Consider Icarus, pasting those sticky wings on (Anne Sexton)

Ambiguity – doubtfulness or uncertainty of meaning or intention


Anagnorisis: Aristotle’s term for a moment of charged recognition in a tragic plot.


Apostrophe - A figure of speech in which an address is made to an absent or deceased


person or a personified thing
Little Lamb, who made thee? (Blake)


O loss of sight, of thee I most complain! (Milton)

Assonance – repetition of two or more vowel sounds within a line


And I do smile such cordial light (Emily Dickinson)

Bildungsroman – a novel of growth or development


Ex.: Jane Eyre and Song of Solomon
Black Humor - the juxtaposition of morbid and farcical elements (in writing or drama) to give a disturbing effect
Blank Verse – Poetry written without rhymes, but which has a set metrical pattern,
usually iambic pentameter. It is often used in narrative and dramatic
poetry.

Cacophony – the use of inharmonious sounds in close conjunction for effect; the opposite of euphony


The shrill demented choirs of wailing shells (Owen)

Caesura – A pause within a line of poetry, sometimes punctuated, sometimes not, often mirroring natural speech.


O could I lose all father now! For why
Will man lament the state he should envy.
Ben Johnson, “On My First Son”

Cadence – Quality of spoken text formed from combining the text’s rhythm with the rise and fall in the inflection of the speaker’s voice.


In Matthew Arnold’s “Dover Beach” the poet creates a cadence that imitates a changing wave pattern by using caesura (with commas)
Listen! You hear the grating roar
Of pebbles which the waves draw back, and fling,
At their return, up the high strand,
Begin, and cease, and then again, begin,
With tremulous cadence slow, and bring,
The eternal note of sadness in.

Catharsis - Aristotle’s term for a tragedy’s emotional effect on its audience—in particular, its power to purge the strong emotions (especially pity and fear) that it has created in the viewer.


Connotation – The suggestion of a meaning by a word beyond what it explicitly denotes


or describes. The word, home, for example, means the place where one
lives, but by connotation, also suggests security, family, love, and
comfort.

Consonance – repetition of two or more consonant sounds within a line


And all is seared with trade; bleared smeared with toil; (Hopkins)

Couplet - Two successive lines of poetry, usually of equal length and rhythmic


correspondence, with end-words that rhyme.
Denotation – The literal dictionary meaning(s) of a word as distinct from an associated
idea or connotation.

Dramatic Situation – the circumstances of the speaker in a poem


Enjambment – a poetic technique in which one line ends without a pause and must continue on the next line to complete its meaning; also referred to as run-on line.


Once more the storm is howling, and hid
Under this cradle-hood and coverlids
My child sleeps on. There is no obstacle
But Gregory’s wood and one bare hill
Whereby the haystack- and roof-levelling wind,
Bred on the Atlantic, can be stayed.
William Butler Yeats, “A Prayer for My Daughter”

Empathy – The feeling or capacity for awareness, understanding, and sensitivity one


experiences when hearing or reading of some event or activity of others,
thus imagining the same sensations as that of those actually experiencing
them.

End Rhyme – rhyme occurring at the end of verse lines


I was angry with my friend,
I told my wrath, my wrath did end. (Wm. Blake)

Epigram – a brief and witty statement that memorably expresses the truth, large or small.


Epiphany – some moment of insight, discovery, or revelation by which a character’s life or view of life is greatly altered.


Euphony – the use of compatible, harmonious sounds to produce a pleasant, melodious effect


And the smooth stream in smoother numbers flow. (Pope)

Extended Metaphor – A metaphor that is drawn-out beyond the usual word or phrase to


extend throughout a stanza or an entire poem, usually by using
multiple comparisons between the unlike objects or ideas.

Exposition- the opening portion of a story that sets the scene, introduces the main characters, and provides any background necessary.


Free Verse – poetry that is free of patterns of rhyme and meter


Half Rhyme – imperfect, approximate rhyme


In the mustard seed sun,
By full tilt river and switchback sea
Where the cormorants scud,
In his house on stilts high among beaks (Dylan Thomas)

Hamartia – an “error in action” rather than a pathological vice; hamartia occurs at a point of crisis and is brought about by an extreme combination of internal and external forces.


Hubris – extreme pride, leading to overconfidence.


Ex.: Creon exhibits hubris in Antigone.

Hyperbole – A bold, deliberate overstatement, e.g., “”I’d give my right arm for a piece of


pizza.” Not intended to be taken literally, it is used as a means of
emphasizing the truth of a statement.
Our hands were firmly cemented. (John Donne)

In medias res – beginning in the middle of things


Internal Rhyme – rhyme contained within a line


The splendour falls on castle walls. (Tennyson)

Imagery – The elements used to evoke mental images, not only of the visual sense, but also of sensation and emotion as well. (visual, auditory, gustatory, olfactory, tactile)


Interior Monologue – an extended presentation of a character’s thoughts, not in a helter-skelter order as in stream-of-consciousness but in an arrangement as if the character were speaking out loud to himself. Ex. I Stand Here Ironing


Irony – the contrast between actual meaning and the suggestion of another meaning



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