Top Banner
Literary Terms Tools of Analysis
66

Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Dec 24, 2015

Download

Documents

Christina Horn
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Literary Terms

Tools of Analysis

Page 2: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Sources

• For Definitions– Norton’s Anthology, textbook– Encarta Dictionary, online– The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum

• For Examples– Instructor, James Gonzales

Page 3: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Style

• The manner of a literary work is its style, the effect of which is its tone. All of the elements of literature working together in a particular work constitute its distinctive style.

Page 4: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Connotation(s)

• The different associations that a word can evoke.

• The word white suggests purity and innocence. In “The Faerie Queene” Spenser tells us that Una rides a palfrey “more white then snow” and leads “a milke white lambe.” Yet Una is “much whiter . . . So pure an innocent . . . She was in life.”

Page 5: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Denotation

• Basic factual definition of a word • Words in older texts may be unfamiliar or have changed

meaning. The Oxford English Dictionary presents the meaning of a word historically.

• The word elf according to Encarta denotes “a small lively imaginary being resembling a human with pointed ears, often consider to have a mischievous nature and magical powers.”

• This denotation fits Puck, Robin Goodfellow, from Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream.

Page 6: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Alliteration

• Repetition of an initial consonant sound • “Many a mournful man made mirth for his

sake.” Sir Gawain and the Green Knight

Page 7: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Onomatopoeia

• Verbal sounds that imitate and evoke the sounds they denote

• From Second Shepherds’ Play Sely Copple, our hen, Both to and fro

She cackles But begin she to croak To groan or to cluck

Page 8: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Rhyme

• The repetition of identical vowel sounds in stressed syllables whose initial consonants differ.

• From Second Shepherds’ PlayFor ponder a These floods so they drown bBoth in fields and in town b rhyme schemeAnd bears all down bAnd that is a wonder a

Page 9: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Allegory

• Allegory is a form of symbolism operating through direct equivalences. The gentleman in Dickinson’s carriage stands for death, Goodman Brown’s wife for faith, Everyman for every man, and so forth. Birenbaum

Page 10: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Euphemism

• (Greek “sweet saying”) the figure by which something distasteful is described in less repugnant terms.

• Referring to death as going to a better place is a good example of euphemism and also a modern example of kenning.

Page 11: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Hyperbole

• (Greek “throwing over”): overstatement, exaggeration

• Shakespeare’s King Lear warns Kent “Come not between the Dragon and his wrath.” Lear, an eighty-year-old man, is exaggerating his power.

Page 12: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Irony

• (Greek “dissimulation): saying one thing and meaning the opposite

• Situational irony results when things turn out the opposite of what might be expected

• In King Lear, Gloucester is unable to see which of his sons is good until he is blinded.

Page 13: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Metaphor

• (Greek “carrying across”) the identification of one thing with another with which it is not literally identifiable

• When King Lear asks Cordelia how much she loves him, she tells him, “I cannot heave my heart into my mouth.” She is telling him that she cannot put her love for him into words.

Page 14: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Paradox

• (Greek “contrary to received opinion) an apparent contradiction that requires thought to reveal an inner consistency

• It is paradoxical that something bad, like losing his kingdom, can help King Lear to gain something good, a clear sense of his own position and an appreciation of the love of his daughter.

Page 15: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Personification

• The attribution of human qualities to nonhuman forces or objects

• Speaking to the thunder and rain, King Lear tells them, “But yet I call you servile ministers, That will with two pernicious daughters join Your high-engendered battles against a head So old and white as this.”

Page 16: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Pun

• A sometimes irresolvable doubleness of meaning in a single word or expression.

• When Claudius refers to Hamlet as son and seems concerned that “the clouds still hang” over Hamlet, mourning the death of his father too much. Hamlet responds, “Not so, my lord, I am too much in the sun.”

Page 17: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Sarcasm

• (Greek “flesh tearing”) a wounding remark, often expressed ironically

• Albany and Goneril in King Lear

Goneril: I have been worth the whistle.Albany: Oh, Goneril, You are not worth the dust which the rude wind blows in your face.

Page 18: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Simile

• (Latin “like”) comparison, usually using the word “like” or “as,” of one thing with another so as to produce surprising analogies.

• Like flies to wanton boys are we to th’ gods. They kill us for their sport.

Gloucester in King Lear

Page 19: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Symbol

• A symbol is an image that tends to generalize itself, so that it evokes associations with typical qualities of life. Birenbaum

• Clothing is a symbol in King Lear. As Lear grows in self-awareness, rich clothing becomes less important: “unaccommodated man is no more but such a poor, bare, forked animal as thou art. Off, off you lendings! Come; unbutton here.”

Page 20: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Rhythm

• (Greek “to flow”) the patterns of sound within the feet of verse lines.

• Chaucer’s description of the Clerk creates a distinctive rhythm.

But al that he mighte of his freendes henteOn bookes and on lerning he it spenteAnd bisily gan for the soules prayeOf hem that yaf him wherewith to scoleye

Page 21: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Accent

• (stress) the special force devoted to the voicing of one syllable in a word over others.

• Poets are aware of the accents of words as they work out the meter and rhythm of a line. Notice that accenting the first syllable yields a noun but on the last syllable a verb.In Lear’s CONflict with his daughters, his desires conFLICT with theirs. They do not perMIT him to party without a special PERmit.

Page 22: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Caesura

• (Latin “cut”) a pause or breathing space within a line of verse, generally occurring between syntactic units

• Anglo-Saxon poetry often indicates the caesura with spaces, as in Caedmon’s Hymn:

Nu sculon herigean herofonrices WeardMeotodes meathte and his modgeþanc caesura

Page 23: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Iamb

• The basic foot of English verse; two syllables, with pattern of a unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable.

Since brass, nor stone, nor earth, nor boundless sea

Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day

Page 24: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Pentameter

• (Greek “five measure”) in English verse, a five-stress line. Basic line for Chaucer, Shakespeare, Milton

• From Sonnet 65, Shakespeare

Since brass, nor stone, nor earth, nor boundless sea

Page 25: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Tetrameter

• (Greek “four measure”) a line with four stresses

• Andrew Marvell uses iambic tetrameter couplets in “To His Coy Mistress”

Had we but world enough and timeThis coyness, lady, were no crimeWe would sit down and think which wayTo walk and pass our long love’s day

Page 26: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Blank Verse

• Unrhymed iambic pentameter lines, as in most of Shakespeare’s plays and Milton’s epics.

Of man’s first disobedience and the fruit Of that forbidden tree, whose mortal taste no rhymesBrought death into the world and all our woe With loss of Eden, till one greater Man . . .

Page 27: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Couplet

• Two consecutive, rhyming lines usually containing the same number of stresses. Chaucer introduced the iambic pentameter couplet in Canterbury Tales.

When that April with his showres soote The droghte of March hath perced to the roote coupletAnd bathed every veine in swich licour Of which ertu engendred is the flowr couplet

Page 28: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Quatrain

• A stanza of four lines, usually rhyming abcb, abab, or abba.

That time of year thou mayst in me behold aWhen yellow leaves, or none, of few, do hang bUpon those boughs which shake against the cold, aBare ruined choirs, where late the sweet birds sang. b

Page 29: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Refrain

• Usually a single line repeated as the last line of consecutive stanzas with subtly different working and ideally with subtly different meaning as the poem progresses.

• In “Epithalamion” Spenser uses variations of this refrain 23 times:

That all the woods may answer and your Eccho ring.

Page 30: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Sonnet

• Fourteen-line poem, usually in rhyming iambic pentameter. Petrarchan sonnet (octave and sestet) and Shakespearean sonnet (three quatrains and couplet)

• Some of Shakespeare’s most famous poems Shall I compare thee to a summer’s dayWhen to the sessions of sweet silent thoughtThat time of year thou mayst in me behold

Page 31: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

First-person Narration

• A narrative in which the voice narrating refers to itself with forms of the first-person pronoun (I, me, my, we, us, our) and in which the narrative is determined by the limitations of that voice.

Chaucer’s frame narrative for The Canterbury Tales is told in first person.

Gulliver’s Travels is told in first person by fictional character Lemuel Gulliver.

Page 32: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Third-person Narrative

• A narrative in which the narrator recounts a narrative of characters referred to by third person pronouns (he, she, they) without the limits of a first-person narrative.

Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is a third-person narrative. The narrator is not part of the events and rarely mentions himself, except to say that it would “tax my wits” to describe something better.

Page 33: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Omniscient Narrator

• (Latin “all-knowing narrator”) A narrator who, in the fiction of the narrative, has complete access to both the deeds and the thoughts of all the characters in the narrative.

The narrator of Paradise Lost, written by John Milton, knows and tells all, even what is spoken and done in Heaven and Hell, besides what is happening in the Garden of Eden.

Page 34: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Frame Narrative

• A situation which provides a context in which a collection of stories can be presented. (JG)

Chaucer goes on a pilgrimage and meets his twenty-nine fellow pilgrims as well as the host of the Tabard, Harry Bailey. Their agreement to tell stories to make the travelling more agreeable creates the frame narrative structure of The Canterbury Tales.

Page 35: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Comedy

• Comedy deals with humorously confusing, sometimes ridiculous situations in which the ending is, nevertheless, happy.

Shakespeare’s All’s Well that Ends Well and As You Like It are comedies. Their titles suggest that the audience will enjoy a story with a happy ending, often a wedding.

Page 36: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Dialogue

• (Greek “conversation”) Conversation presented verbatim in novels and plays.

Lear: But goes thy heart with this?Cordelia: Ay, my good Lord.Lear: So young and so untender?Cordelia: So young, my Lord, and true.Lear: Let it be so. Then truth shall be thy dower.

Page 37: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Dramatic Monologue

• (Greek “single speaking”) a poem in which the voice of a historical or fictional character speaks, unmediated by any narrator to an implied though silent audience.

• “Ulysses” by Tennyson is a prime example of a dramatic monologue.

Page 38: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Elegy

• Poetry of loss, especially upon the death of a loved person.

• Excerpt from Milton’s elegy for Shakespeare

What needs my Shakespear for his honour’d Bones, The labour of an age in piled Stones . . .Dear son of memory, great heir of Fame,What need’st thou such weak witnes of thy name?

Page 39: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Epic

• Extended narrative poem celebrating a hero who embodies the virtues most valued in his culture. (JG)

Page 40: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Epithalamion

• (Greek “concerning the bridal chamber”) a wedding poem, celebrating the marriage and wishing the couple good fortune.

• Spenser’s “Epithalamion” p. 907

Page 41: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Fabliau

• (French “little story”) a short, funny, often bawdy narrative in low style.

• Chaucer’s “The Miller’s Prologue and Tale” p. 239

Page 42: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Lyric

• (Greek “lyre”) Initially meaning a song, “lyric” refers to a short poetic form, without restriction in meter, but with expression of personal emotion, often in first person.

Page 43: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Myth

• One version of reality (Birenbaum) • The narrative of a protagonist with or subject

to superhuman powers. A myth expresses some profound truth.

• Besides Greek myths, other myths such as the Arthurian myths of the Round Table give us stories which presents in an imaginative way the stages of life that people, in general, experience.

Page 44: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Novel

• Usually long prose works, giving high priority to narration of events, novels are rooted in a specific, often complex, social world, and are often focused on one character or small circle of central characters.

• Gulliver’s Travels can be considered as an early example of a novel.

Page 45: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Ode

• (Greek “song”) A lyric poem in elevated style often addressed to a natural force, a person, or an abstract quality

• Keats “Ode to a Nightingale”

Page 46: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Pastoral

• (Latin “pastor, shepherd”) Pastoral is set among shepherds and represents an idyllic, idealized version of their world

Page 47: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Satire

• A genre in which the author, driven by exasperation, targets social ills, hoping to correct them by exposing them. (JG)

• Practically all of Swift’s works.

Page 48: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Tragedy

• A dramatic representation of a character, who driven by hubris, precipitates a catastrophe, which destroys his flawed sense of reality and prompts a more accurate evaluation. (JG)

Page 49: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Allusion

• A passing but illuminating reference with a literary text to another, well-known text, often biblical or classical.

Page 50: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Apostrophe

• (Greek “turning away”) an address, often to an absent person, a force, or a quality.

Page 51: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Canon

• (Greek “rule”) the group of texts regarded as worthy of special respect or attention by a given institution. Also, the group of texts regarded as definitely having been written by a certain author.

Page 52: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Catharsis

• (Greek “cleansing”) According to Aristotle, the effect of tragedy on its audience, through their experience of pity and fear, was a kind of spiritual cleansing.

Page 53: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Character

• The [virtual] person, personified animal, or other figure represented in a literary work. Round or flat characters. Stock characters.

Page 54: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Convention

• A repeatedly recurring feature of works, occurring in combination with other recurring formal features.

• In Shakespeare’s plays, the convention of disguises is absolute. In King Lear, once Edgar disguises himself as Mad Tom, not even his father would ever recognize him.

Page 55: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Decorum

• (Latin “that which is fitting”) a rhetorical principle whereby each formal aspect of a work should be in keeping with its subject matter and or audience.

Page 56: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Dramatic Irony

• A feature of narrative and drama, whereby the audience knows that the outcome of an action will be the opposite of that intended by a character.

Page 57: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Parody

• A work that uses the conventions of a particular genre with the aim of comically mocking a particular feature of a genre.

Page 58: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Persona

• (Latin “sound through”) originally the mask worn in the Roman theater to magnify an actor’s voice. In literary discourse persona refers to the narrator or speaker of a text, by whose voice the author may mask him- or herself.

Page 59: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Protagonist

• (Greek “first actor”) The hero or heroine of a drama or narrative

Page 60: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Rhetoric

• The art of verbal persuasion

Page 61: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Scene

• A sub division of an act. The action of a scene usually occurs in one place.

Page 62: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Soliloquy

• (Latin “single speaking”) A convention of drama, in which a character, alone or thinking to be alone on stage, speaks so as to give the audience access to his or her private thoughts.

Page 63: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Vernacular

• (Latin “verna” servant) the language of the common people as distinguished from learned and arcane languages.

Page 64: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Wit

• In Renaissance, “wit” became a literary ideal of the brilliant play of the full range of mental resources.

• Alexander Pope True wit is Nature to advantage dressed What oft was thought but ne’er so well

expressed.

Page 65: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Kenning

• A metaphoric expression, often a phrase, used to denote another word in Old English poetry. (Encarta Dictionary)

Page 66: Literary Terms Tools of Analysis. Sources For Definitions – Norton’s Anthology, textbook – Encarta Dictionary, online – The Happy Critic, Harvey Birenbaum.

Epic Simile

• A lengthy simile developed over a number of lines of verse in narrative poetry (Encarta Dictionary)