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ENG II Vocabulary. KMH LITERARY TERMINOLOGY RCSHS. ABSTRACT. Part of Speech : adjective – this word will be used to describe Definition: Considered apart from concrete existence Difficult to understand Qualities that cannot be perceived with the five senses.
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ENG II Vocabulary KMH LITERARY TERMINOLOGY RCSHS
ABSTRACT Part of Speech: adjective – this word will be used to describe Definition: • Considered apart from concrete existence • Difficult to understand • Qualities that cannot be perceived with the five senses. Synonyms: complex, indefinite, unreal Examples: Calling something pleasant or pleasing is abstract, while calling something yellow or sour is concrete. The word in use: “The more horrifying this world becomes, the more are becomes abstract.” - Ellen Key Antonyms: actual, concrete, physical, real
AESTHETIC Part of Speech: adjective – this word will be used to describe Definition: • Of, relating to, or dealing with the beautiful • Pleasing in appearance Part of Speech: noun– this word will be used as an idea Definition: 3. a principle of taste or style adopted by a particular person, group, or culture Examples: • The new browser is much more than an aesthetic overhaul. • Also, human conscience has its aesthetic component: our taste for "poetic" justice, the idea of symmetry. • Jones has become famous for creating a modern dance aesthetic that addresses major moral and social questions. The word in use: “I like to work with the same people when I can, and you want to get people with the same interests that you have, and the same aesthetic.” -Spike Lee Synonyms: artistic, creative, gorgeous, pleasing Antonyms: displeasing, ugly
ALLEGORY Part of Speech: noun– this word will be used as an idea or thing Definition: • a poem, play, picture, etc, in which the apparent meaning of the characters and events is used to symbolize a deeper moral or spiritual meaning • The rhetorical strategy of extending a metaphor through an entire narrative so that objects, persons, and actions in the text are equated with meanings that lie outside the text. Examples: • "There are obvious layers of allegory [in the movie Avatar]. The Pandora woods is a lot like the Amazon rainforest (the movie stops in its tracks for a heavy ecological speech or two), and the attempt to get the Na'vi to 'cooperate' carries overtones of the U.S. involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan."(Owen Gleiberman, review of Avatar. Entertainment Weekly, Dec. 30, 2009) Synonyms: fable, moral, symbolic tale Antonyms: fact, non-fiction, truth
ALLITERATION Part of Speech: noun– this word will be used as an idea or thing Definition: • the use of the same consonant or of a vowel, not necessarily the same vowel SOUND at the beginning of each word or each stressed syllable in a line of verse • The repetition of an initial consonant sound Examples: • "a peck of pickled peppers” • “around the rock the ragged rascal ran”
ALLUSION Part of Speech: noun– this word will be used as an idea or thing Definition: • a reference that recalls another work, another time in history, another famous person, and so forth • An indirect reference to a person, place, event, or literary work with which the author believes the reader will be familiar Examples: • "I was not born in a manger. I was actually born on Krypton and sent here by my father, Jor-el, to save the Planet Earth."(Senator Barack Obama, speech at a fund-raiser for Catholic charities, October 16, 2008) • "I violated the Noah rule: predicting rain doesn't count; building arks does."-Warren Buffett
ANECDOTE Part of Speech: noun– this word will be used as an idea or thing Definition: • A short account (or narrative) of an interesting or amusing incident, often intended to illustrate or support some point. Synonyms: story, tale, narration
ANALOGY Part of Speech: noun– this word will be used as an idea or thing Definition: • a form of reasoning in which a similarity between two or more things is inferred from a known similarity between them in other respects • a similarity between like features of two things, on which a comparison may be based Synonyms: likeness, comparison, parallel Examples: • "If you want my final opinion on the mystery of life and all that, I can give it to you in a nutshell. The universe is like a safe to which there is a combination. But the combination is locked up in the safe."(Peter De Vries, Let Me Count the Ways. Little Brown, 1965) • the analogy between the heart and a pump. Antonyms:disagreement, dissimilarity, unlikeness
ANALYSIS Part of Speech: noun– this word will be used as an idea or thing Definition: 1. the separating of any material or abstract entity into its constituent elements 2. this process as a method of studying the nature of something or of determining its essential features and their relations (in Ms. Hedrick’s words – to break something into smaller parts and discuss how these parts affect the whole) Synonyms: complex, indefinite, unreal • RHETORICAL ANALYSIS • A form of close reading that employs the principles of rhetoric to examine the interactions between a text, an author, and an audience. • Rhetorical analysis may be applied to virtually any text or image--a speech, an essay, an advertisement, a poem, a photograph, a web page, even a bumper sticker. When applied to a literary work, rhetorical analysis regards the work not as an aesthetic object but as an artistically structured instrument for communication. As Edward P.J. Corbett has observed, rhetoricalanalysis "is more interested in a literary work for what it does than for what it is."
#9 ANNOTATION Part of Speech: noun– this word will be used as an idea or thing Definition: • a critical (careful, exact evaluation and judgment - expressing or involving an analysis of the merits and faults of a work of literature or art.) or explanatory note or body of notes added to a text. Synonyms: commentary, explanation, interpretation, observations EXAMPLES: Antonyms: blank
Ideas for Annotating A Text • Underline, star, highlight, box, circle whatever words, phrases, or • sentences that catch your attention.Write brief comments in the margins • observations about what is being said or done • what you are reminded of (people, feelings, places, moods) • questions you have • ideas that occur to you • things that you agree or disagree with • any connections you are making • summary comments • identify themes being developed • any literary devices being used
#10 ARCHETYPE Part of Speech: noun– this word will be used as an idea or thing Definition: • An original model or pattern from which other later copies are made, especially a character, an action, or situation that seems to represent common patterns of human life Synonyms: model, pattern, classic exemplar, standard • Archetypes • Carl Jung first applied the term archetype to literature. He recognized that there were universal patterns in all stories and mythologies regardless of culture or historical period and hypothesized that part of the human mind contained a collective unconscious shared by all members of the human species, a sort of universal, primal memory. Joseph Campbell took Jung’s ideas and applied them to world mythologies. In • A Hero with a Thousand Faces, • among other works, he refined the concept of hero and the hero’s journey— George Lucas used Campbell’s writings to formulate the Star Wars saga. Recognizing archetypal patterns inliterature brings patterns we all unconsciously respond to in similar ways to a conscious level. Antonyms: atypical
PLACE HANDOUT IN VOCABULARY SECTION OF NOTEBOOK The term archetype can be applied to: Archetypes can be expressed in Myths Dreams Literature Religions Fantasies Folklore An image A theme A symbol An idea A character type A plot pattern
#15 CLOSE READING Part of Speech: noun– this word will be used as an idea or thing Definition: • Reading a piece of literature carefully, bit by bit, in order to analyze the significance of every individual word, image, and artistic ornament. SEE HANDOUT - PLACE IN THE VOCABULARY SECTION OF YOUR NOTEBOOK (2) the careful, sustained interpretation of a brief passage of text. Such a reading places great emphasis on the particular over the general, paying close attention to individual words, syntax, and the order in which sentences and ideas unfold as they are read.
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