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Literary elements. Setting. The time and place a story occurs . Point of View. The way a story gets told First Person — character in story tells story Third Person Limited — person outside of story tells story but focuses on thoughts and feelings of one character
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Setting • The time and place a story occurs
Point of View The way a story gets told • First Person — character in story tells story • Third Person Limited — person outside of story tells story but focuses on thoughts and feelings of one character • Third person omniscient — person outside of the story knows thoughts and feeling of all characters
Character • Person or animal in the story • Protagonist — Character faced with the conflict • Antagonist — Character who creates the problem • Static character — the character does not change from the beginning of the story to the end of the story • Dynamic character — the character has some kind of internal change or insight by the end of the story
Plot • The events in the story
Exposition • Introduces the setting and the characters • Sets up or hints at the conflict • Once upon a time there were three bears who lived in a beautiful forest. While they were gone one day, a girl named Goldilocks broke into their house.
Inciting Incident • The event that causes the conflict; what happens to get the story going
Rising Action • Shows how the conflict becomes more difficult • Builds suspense • The three bears came home from their walk to find Goldilocks asleep in Baby Bear’s bed. As they stood talking about the situation, she woke up.
Conflict • Problem in the story • Man vs. Man • Man vs. Nature • Man vs. Society • Man vs. Himself
Man vs. Himself • Jealousy, envy, self-hatred, depression
Climax • The most exciting part of the story (turning point)I wonder what’s going to happen?
Falling Action • How the story wraps itself up • The three bears came home from their walk and discovered that someone had eaten their food and sat in their chairs.
Resolution / Denouement • How the conflict is resolved; how the story ends • Then Goldilocks woke up, saw the bears, ran out of the house and never returned again.
Theme • A central message or insight into life; a lesson about life or people that the literary work communicates. • Love conquers all • Money can’t buy happiness • Don’t judge a man until you’ve walked in his shoes
Purpose • The reason why the author wrote the book or article • Entertain --Persuade • Inform
Allusion • Reference to famous historical, biblical, or literary people or events • Donald Trump is such a King Midas.
Flashback • Interruption in story to show scene which occurred earlier. Gives background information about character and plot. Going back in time to fill in details
Foreshadowing • Clues from the author that tell the reader what is going to happen before the characters know
Mood • The feeling created in the reader by a literary work or passage
Tone • The writer’s attitude toward the audience or subject; can usually be described by a single adjective; often referred to as author’s attitude. • Sad,excited, thrilled, apprehensive, anxious,shocked
Symbol • A concrete object which represents an abstract idea • Freedom Love