Literary Devices

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Literary Devices

Everything you need to know to analyze


figurative language in poetry, drama,
literature, speeches, etc., etc., etc.
Essential Question

What are the literary devices I need


to understand to analyze poetry,
drama, and other literature?
TEK

Students understand, make inferences


and draw conclusions about how an
author's sensory language creates
imagery in literary text and provide
evidence from text to support their
understanding
Figurative Language
language that is not meant to be taken
literally, or word for word
Imagery/Sensory Language
• the use of language to create mental
images and sensory impressions for
emotional effect and intensity
• Example—
o He could hear his world crashing down when he heard
the news about her.
o A host, of golden daffodils;
Beside the lake, beneath the trees,
Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.
Continuous as the stars that shine
And twinkle on the Milky Way

from Daffodils by William Wordsworth


Simile

• a comparison of two things that are


essentially different, using the words
like or as
• Example
o O my love is like a red, red rose
from Robert Burn’s “A Red, Red Rose”
Metaphor
• a subtle comparison in which an author
describes a person or thing using words
that are not meant to be taken literally
• Examples—
All the world's a stage,
And all the men and women merely
players:
They have their exits and their
entrances
from As You Like It by William Shakespeare
Extended Metaphor
• a metaphor introduced and then further developed
throughout all or part of a literary work, especially a
poem—comparison can be made to something
else not mentioned in the poem
• Example—
o Nothing Gold Can Stay by Robert Frost
Extended Metaphor
Nothing Gold Can Stay by Robert Frost

Nature's first green is gold


Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf's a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.

Comparison= life to a sunrise


Personification
• figurative language in which
nonhuman things or
abstractions are represented as
having human qualities
• Example—
o Necessity is the
mother of all
invention.
Hyperbole
• an intentional and extreme
exaggeration for emphasis or
effect
• Example—
o This book weighs a ton.
Idiom
Phrases people use in everyday
language which do not make
sense literally, but the meaning
is understood

Examples—
Just hold your horses if you think
idioms are hard! I’m here to let
the cat out of the bag. Idioms are
a dime a dozen, and learning
them is a piece of cake.
OK…now what?
Sound Devices
Focus on the sound of words, rather than
their meaning
Repetition
• Repetition is when an author repeats a word,
phrase, sentence, or stanza for effect or emphasis.

• Examples:
o The chorus or refrain of almost any song
o This poem, by Shel Silverstein:
Rhyme
Rhyme is the repetition of end
sounds in two or more words
or phrases that appear close
to each other in a poem.

A
B
C
B
Alliteration
• Alliteration is the repetition of a sound at the
beginning of words.

• Common examples:
Coca-cola, Tiny Tim, Mickey Mouse
Assonance
• Assonance is the repetition of vowel sounds
• Often creates near-rhyme

“The Bells” by Edgar Allen Poe


“mellow
wedding
bells” –
short e sound

“molten-
golden
notes” –
long o
sound
“liquid
ditty” –
short i sound
Consonance
• Consonance is the repetition of consonant sounds
at the end or middle of words (not rhyme).

“Do Not Go
• For example: Gentle into that
Good Night”
by Dylan Thomas

“blind eyes could


blaze” – z sound

“curse, bless me
now with your
fierce tears” –
s sound
Onomatopoeia
• Onomatopoeia- a word that sounds like the sound it
makes
• For example: pop, crackle, screech, zip, fizz
• Not just sound effects!
Other Literary Devices
Even more…
Symbol
• A symbol is an object, person, place, or action
that has a meaning in itself, and that also stands
for something larger than itself.

For example:
A dove symbolizes peace.

A black crow or raven symbolizes death.

A wedding ring symbolizes...???


Allusion
• An allusion is a reference to a person, place,
event, or literary work that a writer expects the
reader to recognize and understand. It may
come from history, geography, literature, art,
music, or religion.
For example:

You were Romeo, you were throwing pebbles


And my daddy said, "Stay away from Juliet”
“Love Song”, by Taylor Swift
Oxymoron
• An Oxymoron is a figure of speech in which opposites
are paired for effect.
Aphorism
• a concise statement of a general
truth or principle; like a truism
• Example—
o A penny saved is a penny earned. - Ben Franklin
o The man who does not read good books has no
advantage over the man who cannot read them. -
Mark Twain
o “You never really understand a person until
you consider things from his point of view – until
you climb into his skin and walk around in it.”
from To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee
Epigraph
• a quotation at the beginning of a
literary work to introduce its theme
• Example—
o But of the tree of the knowledge of good
and evil,
thou shalt not eat of it:
for in the day that thou eatest
thereof thou shalt surely die.
(Genesis 2:17)
--from Twilight by Stephanie Meyer
o
Irony
• a literary technique used to
create meaning that seems to
contradict the literal meaning
or events
oVerbal
oSituational
oDramatic
Verbal Irony
• use of words in which
the intended meaning is
contrary to the literal
meaning
• Example –
o “Are we gonna do anything
today?” or “Is class gonna be
fun today?”
o In SHREK , when Fiona Says
“Where are you going?” and
Shrek replies “I’ve got to save
my ass.” (Speaking of Donkey, of
course.)
Situational Irony

• implying through plot or character that a


situation is quite different from the way it is
presented.
• Example—
o 'The Wonderful Wizard of Oz', Scarecrow
always had a brain; Tin Man always had a
heart; Dorothy could have always gone
home; the Cowardly Lion wasn’t a coward
after all.
Dramatic
Irony

• dramatic device in which a character says


or does something that he or she does not
fully grasp but which is understood by the
audience
• Example—
o Lois Lane is constantly trying to get an interview
with Superman, but she actually sees him every
day and doesn’t know it (Clark Kent).
Sarcasm
• a bitter form of irony, can be
intended to tease or hurt;
often insinuated by the tone;
late Greek sarkasmós,
f. sarkázein tear flesh, gnash
the teeth, speak bitterly,
f. sárx, sark- flesh.
Example—
o “I’m proud of you, Mom. You’re like
Christopher Columbus. You discovered
something millions of people knew about
before you.” –Lisa Simpson
Paradox
• a seemingly contradictory
statement that on closer analysis
reveals a deeper truth
• Example—
o “I’m nobody.” --anonymous
o “I can resist anything but temptation.”
--Oscar Wilde
o “Nobody goes to that restaurant; it’s
too crowded.”
For Analyzing Poetry
Review
Refrain
• a phrase or verse recurring at intervals
in a song or poem, especially at the
end of each stanza; chorus.
• Example—
o “All you need is love
Love is all you need”
--The Beatles
o
Rhythm
• the BEAT created by the sounds off
the words in a poem
• Rhthym can be created by meter,
rhyme scheme, alliteration,
assonance, and refrain.
Stanza
• A stanza is a group of related words in a poem,
similar to a paragraph of prose but does not
have to have complete sentences.
• It’s like a poetry paragraph!

“When the Teacher’s Back is Turned” by Ken Nesbitt

When the teacher’s back is turned


We never scream and shout
Never do we drop our books Stanza 1
and try to freak her out.

No one throws a pencil


At the ceiling of the class.
No one tries to hit the fire alarm Stanza 2
And break the glass.
Style
• Style is a manner or “way” of writing.
• It involves HOW something is said rather that what is
actually said.
• A writer’s style is determined by the way he/she uses
words.
o Ex: vivid verbs, imagery, sentence structure
maggie and milly and molly and may
went down to the beach (to play one day)
•No capital
and maggie discovered a shell that sang
so sweetly she couldn't remember her troubles, letters
and
milly befriended a stranded star •Personification
whose rays five languid fingers were;
and molly was chased by a horrible thing
•Ends lines in
which raced sideways while blowing bubbles: and the middle of
may came home with a smooth round stone
a “sentence”
as small as a world and as large as alone.
•Imagery
For whatever we lose (like a you or a me)
it's always ourselves we find in the sea

E. E. Cummings writes all his poems like this—no capital letters,


simple language, unusual line breaks. Why do you think he does this?
Tone
• Tone is the writer’s attitude toward a subject,
character, or audience and is conveyed through
the author’s choice of diction, imagery, figurative
language, details, and syntax.

• (In other words, tone is how the author feels about


his subject, character, or audience, and he shows it
through the words he chooses, and how he puts
them together.)
Tone
Some words that can describe
tone are:

happy excited angry


Nervous Sad

sad fearful threatening

thoughtful nervous agitated

ecstatic worried depressed

Belligerent Ecstatic
Mood
• The feeling that the writer creates for the reader.
• This is how the reader is supposed to feel about the
subject.
• Descriptive words, imagery, and figurative
language all influence the mood of a literary work.
Theme
• Theme is the central message of a literary work, or
the idea the author wishes to convey about that
subject. It is not the same as the subject, which
can be expressed in one or two words. (This is a lot
like a truism.)

• Possible themes forThe Outsiders:


o Not all kids who are in gangs are bad.
o People may come from different backgrounds, but
we’re all the same people.
o If something bad happens to someone, don’t blame it
on yourself if it’s not really your fault.

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