Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire...

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Finding Meaning in Literature

Transcript of Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire...

Page 1: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Finding Meaning in Literature

Page 2: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

How do I figure out meaning in literature?

Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Page 3: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Exposition is background information regarding the setting, characters, plot, often found at the beginning of fiction.

Page 4: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Plot is the sequence of events that moves the story along. Events come out of, reveal, and influence characters.

Page 5: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Plot is movement A. Look at beginnings and endings because fiction always involves movement. B. Look at the situation of the major character(s) at the beginning and ending of the story. How they change suggests meaning. C. What works AGAINST movement in the story? What do serious complications show about the story? D. Consider the various lines of action. Determine how they are connected.

Page 6: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

• Conflict is the problem to be solved in the story.• Internal conflict is person versus self.• External conflict is person versus person, person versus

society, person versus nature, person versus technology, person versus fate.

Page 7: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Rising action is the movement of plot toward conflict resolution.

Page 8: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Complication is a plot event that shows one of the conflicts; it is part of the rising action. An example of complication is when Aslan is killed in The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe.

Page 9: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Climax• The point in the story with the highest

excitement. The conflict is about to be resolved. For example, when Dre wins the championship in The Karate Kid.

Page 10: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Denouement

• Also known as the resolution, it is the unraveling of complications at the story’s end. Some works of fiction do not have this.

Page 11: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Foreshadowing and Flashback

• Foreshadowing is when the author provides clues concerning what will happen in the plot. Dreams are a great example of this.

• Flashback involves something that has occurred before the story’s beginning.

Page 12: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Character is a function of two forces: individuality and archetypes (basic types of characters like heroes, villains, wise elders).

A. If characters change, the HOW and WHY are key.

B. What do characters learn or not learn by the denouement?

C.What lesson does the reader learn due to the character?

Page 13: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

D. Questions to ask: Which character is most interesting and why? What purpose do minor characters serve?

In which ways does the author reveal character?

Which characters are believable—if any?

How and why do characters change?

With which character do you most identify or sympathize?

Page 14: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Direct characterization

The glassy-eyed creature looked like a crazed Rastafarian in a Star Wars sequel.

--How the author describes the character (height, age, eyes, clothing)--What other characters say about the character (“He’s mean!” “She’s friendly.”)

Page 15: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Indirect characterization

“I do not want to fight, but I must protect my people and honor my family’s name.”

--What a character says--What a character does--What a character thinks--How a character interacts with other characters--Reader must infer

Page 16: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Protagonist

• Main character who tries to reach a goal and keeps the story going. NOT ALWAYS A “GOOD GUY.” Most complications involve setbacks toward achieving the goal.

Page 17: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Antagonist

• Main character or force that tries to keep the protagonist from reaching the goal.

Page 18: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Point of View: The Narrator

• First person—The narration of the entire novel (not the dialogue) is in first person (I, me, my).

• Ex. “TRUE! nervous, very, very dreadfully nervous I had been and am; but why WILL you say that I am mad? The disease had sharpened my senses, not destroyed, not dulled them. Above all was the sense of hearing acute. I heard all things in the heaven and in the earth” (Edgar Allen Poe).

• The reader knows what the narrator is thinking. It’s as if the narrator is telling the reader what he or she has seen.

Page 19: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Third-Person Point of View

• Third person means the narrator tells the story without using I, me, my (do not look at anything inside quotation marks).

• Ex. “Della finished her cry and attended to her cheeks with the powder rag. She stood by the window and looked out dully at a gray cat walking a gray fence in a gray backyard. Tomorrow would be Christmas Day, and she had only $1.87 with which to buy Jim a present” (O. Henry).

Page 20: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Third-Person Point of View

Third-person limited—Reader knows what only one character in the story is thinking.

Third-person omniscient—Reader knows what several characters in the story are thinking.

Third-person objective—Character knows what nobody is thinking (like a news story).

Page 21: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Questions to ask regarding point of view: A. Whose side, if anyone’s, does the narrator take? B. What is the narrator telling you? C. What ISN’T the narrator telling you? D. If the narrator isn’t telling you everything, why not? E. How reliable is this narrator? F. Why did the author use this point of view?

Page 22: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Setting is the time and place of actionSetting includes the description of buildings, weather, time of day, time of year, geographical information.Ex. Day had broken cold and gray, exceedingly cold and gray, when the man turned aside from the main Yukon trail and climbed the high earth-bank, where a dim and little-travelled trail led eastward through the fat spruce timberland. It was a steep bank, and he paused for breath at the top, excusing the act to himself by looking at his watch. It was nine o'clock. There was no sun nor hint of sun, though there was not a cloud in the sky. It was a clear day, and yet there seemed an intangible pall over the face of things, a subtle gloom that made the day dark, and that was due to the absence of sun” (Jack London).

Page 23: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Setting may be an important factor in Setting may be an important factor in determining atmosphere and limits for the story.determining atmosphere and limits for the story.

A. Be sure to look at the connotation of words.

B. Questions: What is the relation between setting, plot and characters? What would be lost if the descriptions of setting were deleted? How crucial is the particular setting that is used?

Page 24: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Three Types of Irony Verbal– what is said and what is intended.•Dramatic—contrast between what is real and what character thinks is real; the reader or viewer has more information or understanding than the characters. •Situational—contrast between what happens and what reader thinks should happen.

Page 25: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Which type of irony?

• “Nice hat,” she said as she looked at the ugliest had she had ever seen.

• “Of course there is such a thing as the tooth fairy,” said the little girl.

• “Give peace a chance,” said the protester as she punched the officer in the stomach.

• “Nobody came while you were gone,” said the boy while his friends hid in the closet.

Page 26: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

MoodMood• The climate of feeling in a literary work.• The reader’s emotional response• The choice of setting, objects, details, images,

and words all contribute towards creating a specific mood.

• Ex. Sad, mysterious, ironic

Page 27: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

ToneTone• The attitude the writer has towards the

subject he or she is writing about.

• It is evident in word choice, especially in the emotional impact of words, as well as the length of sentences and type of figurative language.

Page 28: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Figurative Language—not LiteralFigurative Language—not Literal• Simile involves a direct comparison between

two unlike things, usually with the words like or as.

• Ex. The muscles on his brawny arms are strong as iron bands.

• Metaphor involves an implied comparison between two relatively unlike things using a form of be. The comparison is not announced by like or as.

• Ex. The road was a ribbon of moonlight.

Page 29: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

PersonificationGives the qualities of a person to an animal, an object, or an idea. It is a comparison which the author uses to show something in an entirely new light, to communicate a certain feeling or attitude towards it and to control the way a reader perceives it. Ex. The tornado turned its full anger on the tiny village.

Page 30: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

HyperboleHyperbole

Page 31: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Allusion• A reference that links concepts that the

reader already has knowledge of with concepts discussed in the story.

• Historical: Waterloo, George Custer• Literary: Scrooge, Knights of the Round Table• Biblical/religious: Jonah, Job, Judas• Mythological: Aphrodite, Thor, Pluto

Page 32: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Symbol• An object, name, animal,

place, color, etc., that represents something beyond itself—an idea or concept. They are emphasized in some way, often through repetition.

• Example: Roses often symbolize love.

Page 33: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

ThemeTheme• Theme is the central truth about the story.Yes: Things are not always as they seem. Love can be more important than money.Theme is NOT a moral or a command. It NEVER

starts with a verb.No: Don’t judge a book by its cover. Be nice to strangers.

Page 34: Finding Meaning in Literature How do I figure out meaning in literature? Analysis looks at an entire work through one or more of its parts.

Theme is always the important goal in a well-written story.

A. In order to discover the theme, one must examine the FACTS of the story (setting, characters, conflict, plot, denouement).

B. Additional considerations are title, names, repetition, a pattern of symbols, and ironic juxtaposition (what is placed next to what).

C. Symbolism must support theme.