1. What is
Poetry? Poetry is a spontaneous and powerful overflow of human
feelings.
2. Drama (Play) (GR.
Deed, action, play) the form of literature intended to be performed usually in
some kind of theater. Drama comes to life when it is interpreted in the
performance of actors who adopt the roles of characters and speak the
dialogues.
3. Farce A
kind of drama intended primarily to provoke laughter, using exaggerated
characters and complicated plots, full of absurd episodes, ludicrous
situations and knockabout action. Mistaken identity is frequently an element in
the plot. The example being The Bear in BA and The Importance of Being Earnest
at Master’s. Comedy A road genre which encompasses a large
variety of different kinds of literature; however, Comedy is used most often
with reference to a kind of drama which is intended primarily to entertain the
audience, and which ends happily for the characters.
4. Satire Literature
which examines or exhibits vice and folly and makes them appear ridiculous or
contemptible. Satire differs from Comic in having a purpose. It is directly
against a person and thing.
5. Allegory An
emblem; a picture or a piece of writing in which meaning is symbolically
represented. The simplest form of Allegory consists of a story or
situation written in such a way as to have two coherent meanings. The Old Man
and the Sea is an allegorical novel.
6. Tragedy Basically
a tragedy traces the career and downfall of an individual and shows in the
downfall both the capacities and limitations of human life. The Protagonist may
be a superhuman, a monarch or, in the modern age, an ordinary person. Aristotle in
his Poetics analyzed and observed that it presented a
single action of a certain magnitude, that it provoked in the audience the
emotions of pity and terror which were then resolved or dissolved by Catharsis
at the play’s climax.
7. Soliloquy (Lat.
To speak alone) A curious but fascinating dramatic convention, which allows
a character in a play or novel to speak directly to the audience, as
if thinking aloud about motives, feelings and decisions. In Othello, Iago
has soliloquized his motives and so has Smirnov in the Bear.
8. Irony is a
contradictory outcome. There are many types of Irony. In dramatic irony,
When the audience of the play know more than the characters and can therefore
foresee the tragic or comic circumstances which will befall. In
situational irony, there is difference from expectation: Suicide committed
by an admired person or murder may be plotted by an apparently harmless person.
In verbal irony, we say one thing but mean another: the
meaning is far from the usual meaning, calling a humble baker a rich man.
It implies a contrast or discrepancy between what is said and meant.
9. Novel. Almost
no one definition is complete because novels are so varied and different in
nature. Still one can start, Novel is an extended prose fiction narrative of
50,000 words or more, broadly realistic--concerning the everyday events of
ordinary people--and concerned with character. "People in significant
action" is one way of describing it. Another definition might be
"an extended, fictional prose narrative about realistic characters and
events." It is a representation of life, experience, and learning. Action,
discovery, and description are important elements, but the most important tends
to be one or more characters--how they grow, learn, find--or don't grow, learn,
or find.
10. Symbol. Something that on the
surface is its literal self but which also has another meaning or even several
meanings. For example, a sword may be a sword and also symbolize justice.
A symbol may be said to embody an idea. There are two general types
of symbols: universal symbols that embody universally recognizable meanings
wherever used, such as light to symbolize knowledge, a skull to symbolize
death, etc., and constructed symbols that are given symbolic meaning by the way
an author uses them in a literary work, as the whales become symbols of evil
and lions of strength in The Old Man and the Sea.
11. Alliteration: repetition of
the same sound beginning several words in sequence. It was roses roses all the
way, with myrtle mixed in my path like mad.
12. Metaphor: implied comparison
achieved through a figurative use of words; the word is used not in its literal
sense, but in one analogous to it *Life's but a walking shadow; a
poor player. You are a lion of the jungle.
13.Personification: is attribution
of personality to an impersonal thing.
No time to turn at Beauty’s
glance
And watch her feet, how they can dance
14. Simile: an explicit comparison
between two things using 'like' or 'as'
You are as brave as a tiger.
People were walking like the dead with vacant eyes.
She is like a friend to me.
15. Dramatic Monologue: A speech
delivered when a character is either alone or isolated on the
stage. In dramatic monologue or soliloquy, the character freely
gives vent to his feelings. The audience overhears
the character talking to himself or herself. The Monologues could be private
as well as public.
16. Image and Imagery: A
figurative or descriptive language that appeals to the five senses or the use
of words and sentences to create an object or scene in the mind of the reader
or listener is called an image. Imagery is the whole painted atmosphere
created by the use of images.
17. Syllables: The unit of
sound is called a syllable such as Work has one syllable; but Work-ing
has two.
18. Line, verse, stanza: The
single written poetic line is called the Line when two lines are combined they
make a Verse and when two or more verses are collected, they form a Stanza.
19. Subjective or Objective: A
thought is subjective when it is concerned with the personal reaction of
somebody and objective when it ignores what the individual feels about
something; but concentrates on the object itself. The Protagonist
(main character of the story) in Araby by James Joyce has subjective
feelings about the bazaar but the objective reality of that place was
different.
20. Protagonist: The
main character in a story, novel or play about whom the whole story
revolves such as the Old Man in the novel and the writer in James Joyce’ Araby.
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