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SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013
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SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

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Page 1: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

SECOND GROUP

AP LITERARY TERMS 2013

Page 2: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

CHIASMUS

In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first, but with the parts reversed.

In the blue grass region, A paradox was born: The corn was full of kernels, and the colonels full of corn. - John Marshall -

Page 3: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

CHIASMUS

Our very hopes belied our fears, Our fears our hopes belied; We thought her dying when she slept, And sleeping when she died. – Thomas Hood.

Page 4: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

CLICHE

A WORD OR PHRASE THAT HAS BECOME LIFELESS BECAUSE OF OVERUSE.

Page 5: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

COLLOQUIALISM

A WORD OF PHRASE IN EVERYDAY USE IN CONVERSATION AND INFORMAL WRITING BUT INAPPROPRIATE FOR FORMAL SITUATIONS

Try these British colloquialisms:

“I’M AT SIXES AND SEVENS.” (in disarray) “I’M KNACKERED.(“extremely tired)

Page 6: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

More British Colloquialisms

“HER MAJESTY’S PLEASURE” – TO BE PUT IN PRISON

“YOU’RE TELLING PORKIES.” – YOU’RE TELLING LIES.

Page 7: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

COMEDY

A STORY THAT ENDS WITH A HAPPY RESOLUTON OF THE CONFLICTS FACED BY THE MAIN CHARACTER OR CHARACTERS

Page 8: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

CONCEIT

AN ELABORATE METAPHOR THAT COMPARES TWO THINGS THAT ARE STARTLINGLY DIFFERENT

Page 9: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

CONCEIT

ROMEO SAYS TO JULIET:

“Thou counterfeit’st a bark, a sea, a wind; For still thy eyes, which I may call the sea, Do ebb and flow with tears; the bark thy body is, Sailing in this salt flood; the winds, thy sighs; Who, raging with thy tears, and they with them, Without a sudden calm, will overset Thy tempest-tossed body.”

Juliet is compared to a ship in a storm at sea.

Page 10: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Juliet and the ship tossed on the sea

Page 11: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Confessional Poetry

A twentieth century term used to describe poetry that uses intimate material from the poet’s life.

Plath’s “Daddy”http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/

15291

Page 12: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Conflict

The struggle between opposing forces or characters in a story

External – between two people, between person and nature or a machine, or between a person and society

Internal – involving opposing forces within a person’s mind

Raskolnikov experiences both.

Page 13: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Connotation

The associations and emotional overtones that have become attached to a word or a phrase, in addition to its strict dictionary definition (denotation)

http://www.piclits.com/lessonplans/poetry_connotations.aspx

Page 14: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Couplet

Two consecutive rhyming lines of poetry :

There lives more life in one of your fair eyes Than both your poets can in praise devise.

Page 15: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Dialect

A way of speaking that is characteristic of a certain social group or of the inhabitants of a certain geographical area

Check out Wuthering Heights’ character Joseph in the next frame:

Page 16: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Yorkshire Dialect

'What are ye for?' he shouted. 'T' maister's down i' t' fowld. Go round by th' end o' t' laith, if ye went to spake to him.'

'Is there nobody inside to open the door?' I hallooed, responsively.

'There's nobbut t' missis; and shoo'll not oppen 't an ye mak' yer flaysome dins till neeght.'

'Why? Cannot you tell her whom I am, eh, Joseph?'

'Nor-ne me! I'll hae no hend wi't,' muttered the head, vanishing.

Page 17: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Translated!

'What do you want?' he shouted. 'The master's down in the fold [sheep pen]. Go round the end of the barn if you want to speak to him.'

'Is there nobody inside to open the door?' I hallooed, responsively.

'There's nobody but the mistress, and she'll not open it for you if you make your frightening din [noise] till night.'

'Why? Cannot you tell her whom I am, eh, Joseph?'

'Not me. I'll not have anything to do with it,' muttered the head, vanishing.

Page 18: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Diction

A speaker or writer’s choice of words

Page 19: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Didactic

A form of fiction or nonfiction that teaches a specific lesson or moral or provides a model of correct behavior or thinking.

e. g. The Bible

Page 20: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Elegy

A poem of mourning, usually abut someone who has died.

“O, Captain, My Captain” – Walt Whitman about the death Lincoln.

http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/15754

Page 21: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Eulogy

A great praise or commendation, a laudatory speech, often about someone who has died.

Ted Kennedy’s eulogy for his brother Bobbiehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p9JTYnMpR

yg

Page 22: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Epanalepsis

Device of repetition in which the same expression (single word or phrase) is repeated both at the beginning and at the end of the line, clause, or sentence)

Page 23: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

EPANALEPSIS

•"Music I heard with you was more than music,

And bread I broke with you was more than bread." (Conrad Aiken, "Bread and Music," 1914)

Page 24: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

EPANALEPSIS

•"Rejoice in the Lord always: and again I say, Rejoice."

The Bible, Phil. 4.4

Page 25: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

EPANALEPSIS

•"The man who did the waking buys the man who was sleeping a drink; the man who was sleeping drinks it while listening to a proposition from the man who did the waking."

(Jack Sparrow, The Pirates of the Caribbean)

Page 26: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

EPANALEPSIS

In times like these, it is helpful to remember that there have always been times like these. " —Paul Harvey

Page 27: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

EPIC

A LONG NARRATIVE POEM, WRITTEN IN HEIGHTENED LANGUAGE, WHICH RECOUNTS THE DEEDS OF A HEROIC CHARACTER WHO EMBODIES THE VALUES OF A PARTICULAR SOCIETY

Page 28: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

EPIGRAPH

A QUOTATION OR APHORISM AT THE BEGINNING OF A LITERARY WORK SUGGESTIVE OF THE THEME.

Mistah Kurtz, he dead” is a line from Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad, which was used in the famous poem “The Hollow Men” by T.S Eliot to describe how modern people had dead souls like Kurtz of Heart of Darkness.

Page 29: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

EPIGRAPH

•Earnest Hemingway also used Gertrude Stein’s famous quotation, “You are all a lost generation,” in the beginning of his book The Sun Also Rises.

http://literarydevices.net/epigraph/

Page 30: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Epistrophe

Device of repetition in which the same expression (single word or phrase) is repeated at the end of two or more lines, clauses, or sentences (the opposite of anaphora)

Page 31: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

EPISTROPHE

"A day may come when the courage of men fails, when we forsake our friends and break all bonds of fellowship, but it is not this day. An hour of woes and shattered shields, when the age of men comes crashing down! But it is not this day! This day we fight!"

(Viggo Mortensen as Aragorn in The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, 2003)

Page 32: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

EPISTROPHE

•"The big sycamore by the creek was gone. The willow tangle was gone. The little enclave of untrodden bluegrass was gone. The clump of dogwood on the little rise across the creek--now that, too, was gone."

(Robert Penn Warren, Flood: A Romance of Our Time. Random House, 1963)

Page 33: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

EPISTROPHE

•Abraham Lincoln: "The People" "It is rather for us the living, we here be dedicated

to the great task remaining before us--that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they here gave the last full measure of devotion--that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain, that this nation shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth."

(Abraham Lincoln, “The Gettysburg Address,” Nov. 19, 1863)

Page 34: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Epistrophe

“There is no Negro problem. There is no Southern problem. There is no Northern problem. There is only an American problem.”

— Lyndon Johnson, Washington, D.C., 15 March 1965

Page 35: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

EPISTOLARY NOVEL

An epistolary novel is also called a novel of letters, because the narration takes place in the form of letters, possibly journal entries, and occasionally newspaper reports. An epistle is an archaic term for a letter.

Example - The Color Purple by Alice Walker

Page 36: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Epithet

An adjective or adjective phrase applied to a person or thing that is frequently used to emphasize a characteristic quality

Page 37: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

EPITHET

Zeus-loved Achilles, you bid me explainThe wrath of far-smiting Apollo.

HOMERIC EPITHET – a cmpd. adj. used with a person or a thing

Page 38: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

EPITHET

I've come,As you surmise, with comrades on a ship,Sailing across the wine-dark sea to menWhose style of speech is very different..." - The Odyssey by Homer

Page 39: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

EPITHET

Shakespearean Epithets:

Thou mad mustachio purple-hued maltworms! Thou puking knotty-pated lout! Thou be-slubbering swag-bellied ratsbane! Thou roguish tickle-brained fustilarian!

Page 40: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Essay

A short piece of nonfiction prose in which the writer discusses some aspect of a subject.

ArgumentationDescriptionExpositionNarrative

Page 41: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Argumentation

One of four forms of discourse using Logic (logos)Ethos (ethics)Pathos (emotion)

Check out this essay, please:

http://www.sparknotes.com/testprep/books/gre/chapter13section4.rhtml

Page 42: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Persuasion

Relies more on emotion than facts

Argument – form of persuasion that appeals to reason instead of emotion

Page 43: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

CAUSAL RELATIONSHIP

1. A causal argument has the following form:

It has been observed that A and B are correlated ------------------------------------------------ So, A is probably the cause of B.

Correlated means that two or more items have a close or mutual relationship with one another. In general the time sequence is: B follows A. For example: It has been observed many times that smoking marijuana is followed by short term memory loss. Thus, smoking marijuana causes short term memory loss.

Page 44: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Description

Form of discourse that uses language to create a mood or emotion

Check out the following examples, please:

http://grammar.about.com/od/developingparagraphs/a/samdescpars.htm

Page 45: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Exposition

One of the four major forms of discourse in which something is explained or set forth

Please check out the following example:

http://www.essay-writing-tips.com/samples/sample-of-5-paragraph-essay-on-astronomy.html

Page 46: SECOND GROUP AP LITERARY TERMS 2013. CHIASMUS In poetry, a type of rhetorical balance in which the second part is syntactically balanced against the first,

Narrative

Form of discourse that tells about a series of events

Please check out the following essay:

http://www.essay-writing-tips.com/samples/sample-of-5-paragraph-essay-on-astronomy.htmlcf.linnbenton.ed