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Literary Elements

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Title: Literary Elements


1
Literary Elements
  • What parts make up a a story?
  • http//members.tripod.com/dscorpio/images/literary
    _elements.ppt

2
Story Grammar
  • Setting
  • Characters
  • Plot
  • Climax
  • Theme
  • Resolution
  • Denouement

3
Setting
Time and place are where the action occurs
  • Details that describe
  • Furniture
  • Scenery
  • Customs
  • Transportation
  • Clothing
  • Dialects
  • Weather
  • Time of day
  • Time of year

4
Elements of a Setting
5
The Functions of a Setting
  • We left the home place behind, mile by slow
    mile, heading for the mountains, across the
    prairie where the wind blew forever.
  • At first there were four of us with one
    horse wagon and its skimpy load. Pa and I
    walked, because I was a big boy of eleven. My
    two little sisters romped and trotted until they
    got tired and had to be boosted up to the wagon
    bed.
  • That was no covered Conestoga, like Pas folks
    came West in, but just an old farm wagon, drawn
    by one weary horse, creaking and rumbling
    westward to the mountains, toward the little
    woods town where Pa thought he had an old uncle
    who owned a little two-bit sawmill.
  • To create a mood or atmosphere
  • To show a reader a different way of life
  • To make action seem more real
  • To be the source of conflict or struggle
  • To symbolize an idea

Taken from The Day the Sun Came Out by D.
Johnson
6
Types of Characters
  • People or animals
  • Major characters
  • Minor characters
  • Round characters
  • Flat characters

7
Characterization
  • A writer reveals what a character is like and how
    the character changes throughout the story.
  • Two primary methods of characterization
  • Direct- writer tells what the character is like
  • Indirect- writer shows what a character is like
    by describing what the character looks like, by
    telling what the character says and does, and by
    what other characters say about and do in
    response to the character.

8
Direct Characterization
And I dont play the dozens or believe in
standing around with somebody in my face doing a
lot of talking. I much rather just knock you down
and take my chances even if Im a little girl
with skinny arms and a squeaky voice, which is
how I got the name Squeaky. From Raymonds
Run by T. Bambara
9
Indirect Characterization
The old man bowed to all of us in the room.
Then he removed his hat and gloves, slowly and
carefully. Chaplin once did that in a picture,
in a bank--he was the janitor. From Gentleman
of Rio en Medio by J. Sedillo
10
Elements of Character
11
Factors in Analyzing Characters
  • Physical appearance of character
  • Personality
  • Background/personal history
  • Motivation
  • Relationships
  • Conflict
  • Does character change?

12
Plot
  • Plot is what happens and how it happens in a
    narrative. A narrative is any work that tells a
    story, such as a short story, a novel, a drama,
    or a narrative poem.

13
Parts of a Plot
  • Inciting incident event that gives rise to
    conflict (opening situation)
  • Development- events that occur as result of
    central conflict (rising action)
  • Climax- highest point of interest or suspense of
    story
  • Resolution- when conflict ends
  • Denouement- when characters go back to their life
    before the conflict

14
Diagram of Plot
Climax
Resolution
Development/Rising Action
Introduction
Denouement
Inciting incident/Opening situation
15
Special Techniques of Plot
  • Suspense- excitement or tension
  • Foreshadowing- hint or clue about what will
    happen in story
  • Flashback- interrupts the normal sequence of
    events to tell about something that happened in
    the past
  • Surprise Ending- conclusion that reader does not
    expect

16
Conflict
  • Conflict is a struggle between opposing forces
  • Every plot must contain some kind of conflict
  • Stories can have more than one conflict
  • Conflicts can be external or internal
  • External conflict- outside force may be person,
    group, animal, nature, or a nonhuman obstacle
  • Internal conflict- takes place in a characters
    mind

17
Internal ConflictMoral Dilemma
  • A moral dilemma is most commonly known as a
    problem that offers more than one solution or
    possibility, of which none are preferred by the
    person(s) presented with the dilemma.

18
EXAMPLE
  • You discover that your older brother is using
    illegal drugs.
  • He has sworn you to secrecy.
  • He says that he will run away from home if you
    tell on him.
  • What do you do?

19
EXAMPLE
  • You have witnessed your best friend taking sweets
    from your Aunts shop, and encouraging other
    children to steal, too.
  • If you tell on him, you are likely to be made an
    outcast by your friendship group.
  • Your Aunt is already having financial
    difficulties.
  • What do you do?

20
Theme
  • A central message, concern, or insight into life
    expressed through a literary work
  • Can be expressed by one or two sentence statement
    about human beings or about life
  • May be stated directly or implied
  • Interpretation uncovers the theme

21
Examples of Themes
  • Friendship and Love are commonly portrayed in
    children's literature. Shiloh by Phyllis Reynolds
    Naylor is the story of a young boy who goes to
    great lengths to protect his dog from abuse.
    Charlotte's Web is another story about the
    friendship, between a young girl and her pet
    pig.
  • Stories featuring lessons about honesty are
    common. Pinocchio is about a puppet who wants
    nothing more than to be a real boy so that he
    will be loved by his maker. When Pinocchio lies,
    his nose grows. He faces troubles throughout the
    story because of this trait. The Boy Who Cried
    Wolf is another well-known story which focuses on
    the dangers of deceptiveness. The boy in the
    story lies so often that no one believes him when
    he is telling the truth.
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