
以下是各种英语学习里要用到的各种词汇或者修辞方法。下面有提供下载版的pdf文件(彩色版)。个人认为值得下载收藏吧。毕竟这是学习外语文学必备的东西~
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Literary terms:refers to the words themselves with which we identify and describe literary elements and techniques. They are not found in literature and they are not “used” by authors.
Literary elements:refers to aspects or characteristics of a whole text. They are not “used,” per se, by authors; we derive what they are from reading the text. Most literary elements can be derived from any and all texts; for example, every story has a theme, every story has a setting, every story has a conflict, every story is written from a particular point-of-view, etc. In order to be discussed legitimately, literary elements must be specifically identified for that text.
Allegory:Where every aspect of a story is representative, usually symbolic, of something else, usually a larger abstract concept or important historical/geopolitical event.
- Lord of the Flies provides a compelling allegory of human nature, illustrating the three sides of the psyche through its sharply-defined main characters.
Characterization:The author’s means of conveying to the reader a character’s personality, life history, values, physical attributes, etc. Also refers directly to a description thereof.
- Atticus is characterized as an almost impossibly virtuous man, always doing what is right and imparting impeccable moral values to his children.
- The story reaches its climax in Act III, when Mercutio and Tybalt are killed and Romeo is banished from Verona.
- The conflict between the Montagues and Capulets causes Romeo and Juliet to behave irrationally once they fall in love.
- Jack’s priorities are in conflict with those of Ralph and Piggy, which causes him to break away from the group.
- Man-versus-nature is an important conflict in The Old Man and the Sea.
- Madame Defarge’s actions seem almost reasonable in the context of the Revolution.
- The noble, virtuous father Macduff provides an ideal foil for the villainous, childless Macbeth.
- The mood of Macbeth is dark, murky and mysterious, creating a sense of fear and uncertainty.
- Blood is an important motif in A Tale of Two Cities, appearing numerous times throughout the novel.
Point-of-view:The identity of the narrative voice; the person or entity through whom the reader experiences the story. May be third-person (no narrator; omniscient or limited) or first-person (narrated by a character in the story). Point-of-view is a commonly misused term; it does not refer to the author’s (or characters’) feelings, opinions, perspectives, biases, etc.
- Though it is written in third-person, Animal Farm is told from the point-of-view of the common animals, unaware of what is really happening as the pigs gradually and secretively take over the farm.
- Writing the story in first-person point-of-view enables the reader to experience the soldier’s fear and uncertainty, limiting the narrative to what only he saw, thought and felt during the battle.
Setting:The time and place where a story occurs. The setting can be specific (e.g., New York City in 1930) or ambiguous (e.g., a large urban city during economic hard times). Also refers directly to a description thereof.
- The novel is set in the South during the racially turbulent 1930’s, when blacks were treated unfairly by the courts.
- With the island, Golding creates a pristine, isolated and uncorrupted setting, in order to show that the boys’ actions result from their own essential nature rather than their environment.
Structure:The manner in which the various elements of a story are assembled.
- The individual tales are told within the structure of the larger framing story, where the 29 travelers gather at the Inn at Southwark on their journey to Canterbury, telling stories to pass the time.
- The play follows the traditional Shakespearean five-act plot structure, with exposition in Act I, development in Act II, the climax or turning point in Act III, falling action in Act IV, and resolution in Act V.
- Orwell’s theme is that absolute power corrupts absolutely.
- The idea that human beings are essentially brutal, savage creatures provides the central theme of the novel.
- The poem has a bitter and sardonic tone, revealing the speaker’s anger and resentment.
- The tone of Gulliver’s narration is unusually matter-of-fact, as he seems to regard these bizarre and absurd occurrences as ordinary or commonplace.
Tragic hero/tragic figure:A protagonist who comes to a bad end as a result of his own behavior, usually caused by a specific personality disorder or character flaw.
- Willy Loman is one of the best-known tragic figures in American literature, oblivious to and unable to face the reality of his life.
- Othello’s tragic flaw is his jealousy, which consumes him so thoroughly that he is driven to murder his wife rather than accept, let alone confirm, her infidelity.
Anthropomorphism:Where animals or inanimate objects are portrayed in a story as people, such as by walking, talking, or being given arms, legs and/or facial features. (This technique is often incorrectly called personification.)
- The King and Queen of Hearts and their playing-card courtiers comprise only one example of Carroll’s extensive use of anthropomorphism in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.
- Most of Shakespeare’s dialogue is written in blank verse, though it does occasionally rhyme.
- Orwell took some creative license with the historical events of the Russian Revolution, in order to clarify the ideological conflicts.
- Since there is so little stage direction in Shakespeare, many of the characters’ thoughts and actions are revealed through dialogue.
- Macbeth responds with disbelief when the weird sisters call him Thane of Cawdor; ironically, unbeknownst to him, he had been granted that title by king Duncan in the previous scene.
- The first chapter consists mostly of exposition, running down the family’s history and describing their living conditions.
- The poet makes extensive use of figurative language, presenting the speaker’s feelings as colors, sounds and flavors.
- Willy’s concern for his car foreshadows his eventual means of suicide.
- The author uses hyperbole to describe Mr. Smith, calling him “the greatest human being ever to walk the earth.”
- Shakespeare wrote most of his dialogue in iambic pentameter, often having to adjust the order and nature of words to fit the syllable pattern, thus endowing the language with even greater meaning.
- The author’s use of visual imagery is impressive; the reader is able to see the island in all its lush, colorful splendor by reading Golding’s detailed descriptions.
- Jem and Scout are saved by Boo Radley, who had ironically been an object of fear and suspicion to them at the beginning of the novel.
- Shakespeare often uses light as a metaphor for Juliet; Romeo refers to her as the sun, as “a rich jewel in an Ethiop’s ear,” and as a solitary dove among crows.
- Remarque uses onomatopoeia to suggest the dying soldier’s agony, his last gasp described as a “gurgling rattle.”
- Romeo describes love using several oxymorons, such as “cold fire,” “feather of lead” and “sick health,” to suggest its contradictory nature.
- In 1984, “doublethink” refers to the paradox where history is changed, and then claimed to have never been changed.
- A Tale of Two Cities opens with the famous paradox, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.”
- Hobbs’ final strikeout parallels the Whammer’s striking out against him at the beginning of the novel.
- Malamud personifies Hobbs’ bat, giving it a name, Wonderboy, referring to it using personal pronouns, and stating that “he went hungry” during Hobbs’ batting slump.
- The Greeks personified natural forces as gods; for example, the god Poseidon was the personification of the sea and its power over man.
- The repetition of the words “What if…” at the beginning of each line reinforces the speaker’s confusion and fear.
- The simile in line 10 describes the lunar eclipse: “The moon appeared as a large drop of blood.”
- Golding uses symbols to represent the various aspects of human nature and civilization as they are revealed in the novel. The conch symbolizes order and authority, while its gradual deterioration and ultimate destruction metaphorically represent the boys’ collective downfall.
- Orwell gives this torture and brainwashing facility the ironic title, “Ministry of Love".