elements of literature

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Elements of Literature

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Elements of Literature. Literature is composed of several common elements. Elements. Setting Characters Conflict Plot Point of View Tone Mood. Setting. Where it takes place. Characters. Characters are the people in the story. Types of Characters. Flat Round Static Dynamic. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Elements of   Literature

Elements of Literature

Page 2: Elements of   Literature

Literature is composed of several common elements.

Page 3: Elements of   Literature

Elements

Setting Characters Conflict Plot Point of View Tone Mood

Page 4: Elements of   Literature

Setting

Where it takes place

Page 5: Elements of   Literature

Characters Characters are the people

in the story.

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Types of Characters

Flat Round Static Dynamic

Page 7: Elements of   Literature

Flat Characters

Are one dimensional. Good guy =Hero

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Round Characters

Have many sides to them Good/Bad

Page 9: Elements of   Literature

Static Characters

Never change

Page 10: Elements of   Literature

Dynamic Characters

Change during the story Main character

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Think

Name the four types of characters

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Types of Characters

Flat

Round

Dynamic

Static

Superman

Professor Snape

Edward, Bella

Santa

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Major CharactersFall into one of the three categories…

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Major Characters

Protagonist Antagonist Foil

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Protagonist Main character

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Antagonist Opposition of

Protagonist

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Foil Character who provides

contrast to Protagonist

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PLOT

Sequence of events Give Structure

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Basic Sequence

Exposition Rising Action Climax Falling Action Resolution

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Plot Diagram

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Exposition Beginning of the story

“Once upon a time”

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Rising Action Sets up conflict Builds tension

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Climax Turning point High Point

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Falling Action Wrapping up story Immediately after climax

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Resolution Point of closure Ending

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Think

Where does each part fit?

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Plot diagram

Exposition

Rising Action

Climax

Falling Action

Resolution

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Wrap- up, after the climax

A. Rising Action B. Falling Action C. Climax D. Exposition

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Beginning, once upon a time

A. Rising Action B. Exposition C. Climax D. Falling Action

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High point, turning point

A. Climax B. Ending C. Beginning D. Builds tension

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Sets up conflict, tension building

A. Falling action B. Climax C. Rising Action D. Exposition

Page 32: Elements of   Literature

Types of Conflict Conflict is more than just

a fight.

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Man vs. Man

Two humans in confrontation

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Man vs. Self

Internal conflict, struggle

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Man vs. Nature

Facing the elements or animals

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Man vs. Society

Going against social norms

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Theme

Central concept Mystery, Science Fiction, Romance

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Point of View Angle the story is being told from

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First person As if you are telling a

story

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Third Person Limited

Story told from an observer

See, Hear

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Third Person- Objective

Sees into the mind of a character

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Omniscient Told by a person who

knows everything about everyone in the story.

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An omniscient is NOT a character!

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Foreshadowing Hints or clues on what’s

to come

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Foreshadowing Serves two purposes in a story

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Purpose one Builds suspense Keeps you reading

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Purpose Two

Makes narrator more believable

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Irony Contrast between what

appears true and what really is.

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Three Types of Irony

Verbal Situational Dramatic

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Verbal Irony What is said vs. what is

meant

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Irony of the Situation

Happening that is opposite of what’s expected

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Dramatic Irony Reader knows more than

character

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Tone

Author’s attitude toward a subject

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Tone

Pessimism Optimism Bitterness Joyful Humorous Earnestness

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Mood

* The feeling or climate of a story

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Mood

Setting Objects Details Images Words

Influence the Mood

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Figurative Language Language that goes

beyond literal meaning

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Simile

Direct comparison of two unlike things

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Metaphor Implied comparison of two

unlike things

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Metaphor

The comparison is not announced.

“Like”

“As”

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Hyperbole

Exaggerated terms “I read it a million times!”

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Onomatopoeia

Words that mimic sounds BANG! POW!