Resources

Terms

  • Aesthetics-“Philosophical investigation
    into the nature of beauty and the perception of beauty, especially in
    the arts; the theory of art or artistic taste.”
  • Allegory-“A
    story or visual image with a second distinct meaning partially hidden
    behind its literal or visible meaning. In written narrative, allegory
    involves a continuous parallel between two (or more) levels of meaning
    in a story, so that its persons and events correspond to their
    equivalents in a system of ideas or a chain of events external to the
    tale.”
  • Allusion-An indirect or passing
    reference to some event, person, place, or artistic work, the nature
    and relevance of which is not explained by the writer but relies o­n
    the reader’s familiarity with what is thus mentioned.
  • Ambiguity-A
    statement which can contain two or more meanings. For example, when the
    oracle at Delphi told Croesus that if he waged war o­n Cyrus he would
    destroy a great empire, Croesus thought the oracle meant his enemy’s
    empire. In fact, the empire Croesus destroyed by going to war was his
    own.
  • Analogy-A resemblance of relations;
    an agreement or likeness between things in some circumstances or
    effects, when the things are otherwise entirely different.
  • Anaphora-repetition
    of a word or phrase at the beginning of successive phrases, clauses, or
    sentences. “We shall not flag or fail. We shall go o­n to the end. We
    shall fight in France.
  • Anecdote-A very
    short tale told by a character in a literary work. In Chaucer’s
    “Canterbury Tales,” “The Miller’s Tale” and “The Carpenter’s Tale” are
    examples.
  • Antagonist-the character,
    force, or collection of forces in fiction or drama that opposes the
    protagonist and gives rise to the conflict of the story.
  • Anti-hero-a
    protagonist who has the opposite of most of the traditional attributes
    of a hero. [A character who] may be bewildered, ineffectual, deluded,
    or merely pathetic.
  • Aphorism-A brief
    statement which expresses an observation o­n life, usually intended as
    a wise observation. Benjamin Franklin’s “Poor Richard’s Almanac”
    contains numerous examples, o­ne of which is Drive thy business; let it not drive thee.

  • Apostrophe-A figure of speech wherein the speaker speaks directly to something nonhuman.
  • Archetype-a
    term used to describe universal symbols that evoke deep and sometimes
    unconscious responses in a reader. In literature, characters, images,
    and themes that symbolically embody universal meanings and basic human
    experiences.
  • Aside-A device in which a
    character in a drama makes a short speech which is heard by the
    audience but not by other characters in the play.
  • Asyndeton– The omission of a conjunction from a list (‘chips, beans, peas, vinegar, salt, pepper’).
  • Canon
    a Greek word that implies rule or law, and is used in literature as the
    source which regulates which selection of authors or works, would be
    considered important pieces of literature.
  • Catharsis-Meaning
    “purgation,” catharsis describes the release of the emotions of pity
    and fear by the audience at the end of a tragedy. In his Poetics,
    Aristotle discusses the importance of catharsis. The audience faces the
    misfortunes of the protagonist, which elicit pity and compassion.
    Simultaneously, the audience also confronts the failure of the
    protagonist, thus receiving a frightening reminder of human limitations
    and frailties.
  • Chiasmus– A term from
    classical rhetoric that describes a situation in which you introduce
    subjects in the order A, B, and C, and then talk about them in the
    order C, B, and A.
  • Climax-The decisive
    moment in a drama, the climax is the turning point of the play to which
    the rising action leads. This is the crucial part of the drama, the
    part which determines the outcome of the conflict.
  • Colloquialism-spoken or written communication that seeks to imitate informal speech.
  • Comedy -A literary work which is amusing and ends happily. Modern comedies
    tend to be funny, while Shakespearean comedies simply end well.

  • Conceit-A far-fetched simile or metaphor, a literary conceit occurs when the speaker compares two highly dissimilar things.
  • Connotation-The emotional implications and associations that words may carry, as distinguished from their denotative meanings.
  • Denotation-The basic dictionary meaning of a word, as opposed to its connotative meaning.
  • Deus ex machina-An
    unrealistic or unexpected intervention to rescue the protagonists or
    resolve the conflict. The term means “The god out of the machine,” and
    refers to stage machinery.
  • Diction-An
    author’s choice of words. Since words have specific meanings, and since
    o­ne’s choice of words can affect feelings, a writer’s choice of words
    can have great impact in a literary work.
  • Didactic-A work “designed to impart information, advice, or some doctrine of morality or philosophy.”
  • Epigraph-A brief quotation which appears at the beginning of a literary work.
  • Epigram
    A pithy, sometimes satiric couplet or quatrain which was popular in
    classic Latin literature and in European and English literature of the
    Renaissance and the neo-Classical era.
  • Epithet-In
    literature, a word of phrase preceding or following a name which serves
    to describe the character. For example, in the Iliad: Zeus-loved
    Achilles.
  • Exegesis– Critical interpretation of a text, especially a biblical text; from the Greek ex- + egeisthai meaning “to lead out.

  • Farce-A
    type of comedy based o­n a humorous situation such as a bank robber who
    mistakenly wanders into a police station to hide. It is the situation
    here which provides the humor, not the cleverness of plot or lines.
  • Formalism
    strict observance of the established rules, traditions and methods
    employed in the arts. Formalism can also refer to the theory of art
    that relies heavily o­n the organization of forms in a work rather than
    o­n the content.
  • Framing device-A story
    in which o­ne or more other stories are told. Examples include the
    Prologue to the Canterbury Tales and the play at the beginning of the
    Taming of the Shrew.
  • Genre-A literary
    genre is a recognizable and established category of written work
    employing such common conventions as will prevent readers or audiences
    from mistaking it [with] another kind.
  • Gothic- characterized by gloom and mystery and the grotesque; gothic novels include Frankenstein.
  • Homily– An inspirational saying or platitude.
  • Hubris
    a common theme in Greek tragedies and mythology, whose stories often
    featured protagonists suffering from hubris and subsequently being
    punished by the gods for it.
  • Hyperbole-A figure of speech in which an overstatement or exaggeration is used for deliberate effect.
  • Idiom– A specialized vocabulary used by a group of people; jargon or A style or manner of expression peculiar to a given people.
  • Imagery
    the collection of images within a literary work. Used to evoke
    atmosphere, mood, tension. For example, images of crowded, steaming
    sidewalks flanking streets choked with lines of shimmering, smoking
    cars suggests oppressive heat and all the psychological tensions that
    go with it.

  • In media res– in or into the middle of a sequence of events, as in a literary narrative.
  • Intentional fallacy-assuming from the text what the author intended to mean.
  • Interpolation-A passage included in an author’s work without his/her consent.
  • Intertextuality
    Intertextuality is, thus, a way of accounting for the role of literary
    and extra-literary materials without recourse to traditional notions of
    authorship. A literary work, then, is not simply the product of a
    single author, but of its relationship to other texts and to the
    strucutures of language itself.
  • Inversion-reversal of the normal order of words for dramatic effect.
  • Irony– A device that depends o­n the existence of at least two separate and contrasting levels of meaning embedded in o­ne message. Verbal irony is sarcasm, when the speaker says something other than what they really mean. In dramatic irony, the audience is more aware than the characters in a work. Situational irony occurs when the opposite of what is expected happens. This type of
    irony often emphasizes that people are caught in forces beyond their
    comprehension and control.
  • Litotes– A figure of speech consisting of an understatement in which an affirmative is expressed by negating its opposite, as in This is no small problem.
  • Magical realism– a literary technique where the disbelief of the reader and writer produces a
  • momentary shift in the real world wherein an element of the surreal enters and leaves with ease.”
  • Malapropism– is an incorrect usage of a word, usually with comic effect. “He is the very pineapple of politeness.”
  • Metaphor
    a type of figurative language in which a statement is made that says
    that o­ne thing is something else but, literally, it is not. In
    connecting o­ne object, event, or place, to another, a metaphor can
    uncover new and intriguing qualities of the original thing that we may
    not normally notice or even consider important. Metaphoric language is
    used in order to realize a new and different meaning.

  • Metonymy-A
    figure of speech in which a word represents something else which it
    suggests. For example in a herd of fifty cows, the herd might be
    referred to as fifty head of cattle.
  • Minimalism- a style of art in which objects are stripped down to their elemental,
    geometric form, and presented in an impersonal manner. In literature,
    minimalists use short descriptions and simple sentences.
  • Monologue-thoughts of a single person, directed outward.
  • Motif-A
    recurrent image, word, phrase, represented object or action that tends
    to unify the literary work or that may be elaborated into a more
    general theme.
  • Naturalism– The term
    naturalism describes a type of literature that attempts to apply
    scientific principles of objectivity and detachment to its study of
    human beings. Unlike realism, which focuses o­n literary technique,
    naturalism implies a philosophical position.
  • Nemesis
    a villain who has a particular interest in defeating a hero or group of
    heroes, and who is often of particular interest to the hero(es) in
    return.
  • Oxymoron-A combination of contradictory terms, like compassionate conservative.
  • Parallelism– the repetition of words, phrases, sentences that have the same grammatical structure or that restate a similar idea. Restatement is repetition of an entire idea in different words. Structuralism Parallelism is the repetition of a word or entire sentence pattern. Antithesis is connecting ideas that are opposite, rather than similar.
  • Parable- a brief and often simple narrative that illustrates a moral or
    religious lesson. Some of the best-known parables are in the Bible,
    where Jesus uses them to teach his disciples.
  • Parody– a literary form in which the style of an author or particular work is mocked in its style for the sake of comic effect.

  • Pathetic fallacy
    The attribution of human emotions or characteristics to inanimate
    objects or to nature; for example, angry clouds; a cruel wind.
  • Pastoral– Of, relating to, or being a literary or other artistic work that portrays or evokes rural life, usually in an idealized way.
  • Persona
    In literature, the persona is the narrator, or the storyteller, of a
    literary work created by the author. As Literature: An Introduction to
    Fiction, Poetry, and Drama puts it, the persona is not the author, but
    the author’s creation–the voice “through which the author speaks.”
  • Personification
    A figure of speech where animals, ideas or inorganic objects are given
    human characteristics. o­ne example of this is James Stephens’s poem
    “The Wind” in which wind preforms several actions. In the poem Stephens
    writes, “The wind stood up and gave a shout. He whistled o­n his two
    fingers.”
  • Point of view– a way the
    events of a story are conveyed to the reader, it is the “vantage point”
    from which the narrative is passed from author to the reader. In the omniscient point of view, the person telling the story, or narrator, knows everything that’s going o­n in the story. In the first- person point of view, the narrator is a character in the story. Using the
    pronoun “I” the anrrator tells us his or her own experiences but cannot
    reveal with certainty any other character’s private thoughts. In the limited third-person point of view, the narrator is outside the story- like an omniscient
    narrator- but tells the story from the vantage point of o­ne character.
  • Polemic– A controversial argument, especially o­ne refuting or attacking a specific opinion or doctrine.
  • Protagonist-the central character of a literary work.
  • Realism
    Broadly defined as “the faithful representation of reality” or
    “verisimilitude,” realism is a literary technique practiced by many
    schools of writing. Although strictly speaking, realism is a technique,
    it also denotes a particular kind of subject matter, especially the
    representation of middle-class life.
  • Rhetoric– The art of persuasive argument through writing or speech–the art of eloquence and charismatic language.
  • Roman a clef– a novel in which actual persons and events are disguised as fictional characters.

  • Romance
    The mythos of literature concerned primarily with an idealized world. A
    form of prose fiction practised by Scott, Hawthorne, William Morris,
    etc., distinguishable from the novel.
  • Romanticism
    Romanticism, which was a reaction to the classicism of the early 18th
    century, favored feeling over reason and placed great emphasis o­n the
    subjective, or personal, experience of the individual. Nature was also
    a major theme.
  • Satire- A literary work
    which exposes and ridicules human vices or folly. Historically
    perceived as tending toward didacticism, it is usually intended as a
    moral criticism directed against the injustice of social wrongs.
  • Scansion
    The analysis of a poem’s meter. This is usually done by marking the
    stressed and unstressed syllables in each line and then, based o­n the
    pattern of the stresses, dividing the line into feet.
  • Semantics-the study of the meaning of language, as opposed to its form.
  • Semiotics– theories regarding symbolism and how people glean meaning from words, sounds, and pictures.
  • Stock character
    a fictional character that relies heavily o­n cultural types or
    stereotypes for its personality, manner of speech, and other
    characteristics. Stock characters are instantly recognizable to members
    of a given culture.
  • Stream of consciousness
    technique that records the multifarious thoughts and feelings of a
    character without regard to logical argument or narrative sequence. The
    writer attempts by the stream of consciousness to reflect all the
    forces, external and internal, influencing the psychology of a
    character at a single moment.
  • Subtext-the hidden meaning lying behind the overt.
  • Synecdoche
    A figure of speech in which a part of something stands for the whole or
    the whole for a part, as wheels for automobile or society for high
    society.

  • Syntax– The way in which linguistic elements (words and phrases) are arranged to form grammatical structure.
  • Soliloquy
    A dramatic or literary form of discourse in which a character talks to
    himself or herself or reveals his or her thoughts without addressing a
    listener.
  • Tone– the writer’s attitude
    toward the material and/or readers. Tone may be playful, formal,
    intimate, angry, serious, ironic, outraged, baffled, tender, serene,
    depressed or combinations.
  • Theme– (1) the
    abstract concept explored in a literary work; (2) frequently recurring
    ideas, such as enjoy-life while-you-can; (3) repetition of a meaningful
    element in a work, such as references to sight, vision, and blindness
    in Oedipus Rex.
  • Tragedy– A serious play
    in which the chief figures, by some peculiarity of character, pass
    through a series of misfortunes leading to a final, devastating
    catastrophe.
  • Tragic flaw (hamartia)-the character flaw or error of a tragic hero that leads to his downfall).
  • Trope
    The intentional use of a word or expression figuratively, i.e., used in
    a different sense from its original significance in order to give
    vividness or emphasis to an idea. Some important types of trope are:
    antonomasia, irony, metaphor, metonymy and synecdoche.
  • Utopia/Dystopia-a
    utopia is an imaginary and indefinitely remote place of ideal
    perfection especially in laws, government, and social conditions. A dystopia is an imaginary place where people lead dehumanized and often fearful
    lives; an imaginary place or state where everything is as bad as it
    possibly can be: or a description of such a place.
  • Vernacular– the everyday speech of the people (as distinguished from literary language).
  • Vignette– a small illustrative sketch.
  • Voice-in writing, a metaphor drawn from the spoken, encompassing the writer’s tone, style, and manner.


1. accusatory-charging of wrong doing
2. apathetic-indifferent due to lack of energy or concern
3. awe-solemn wonder
4. bitter-exhibiting strong animosity as a result of pain or grief
5. cynical-questions the basic sincerity and goodness of people
6. condescension; condescending-a feeling of superiority
7. callous-unfeeling, insensitive to feelings of others
8. contemplative-studying, thinking, reflecting on an issue
9. critical-finding fault
10. choleric-hot-tempered, easily angered
11. contemptuous-showing or feeling that something is worthless or lacks respect
12. caustic-intense use of sarcasm; stinging, biting
13. conventional-lacking spontaneity, originality, and individuality
14. disdainful-scornful
15. didactic-author attempts to educate or instruct the reader
16. derisive-ridiculing, mocking
17. earnest-intense, a sincere state of mind
18. erudite-learned, polished, scholarly
19. fanciful-using the imagination
20. forthright-directly frank without hesitation
21. gloomy-darkness, sadness, rejection
22. haughty-proud and vain to the point of arrogance
23. indignant-marked by anger aroused by injustice
24. intimate-very familiar
25. judgmental-authoritative and often having critical opinions
26. jovial-happy
27. lyrical-expressing a poet’s inner feelings; emotional; full of images; song-like
28. matter-of-fact–accepting of conditions; not fanciful or emotional
29. mocking-treating with contempt or ridicule
30. morose-gloomy, sullen, surly, despondent
31. malicious-purposely hurtful
32. objective-an unbiased view-able to leave personal judgments aside
33. optimistic-hopeful, cheerful
34. obsequious-polite and obedient in order to gain something
35. patronizing-air of condescension
36. pessimistic-seeing the worst side of things; no hope
37. quizzical-odd, eccentric, amusing
38. ribald-offensive in speech or gesture
39. reverent-treating a subject with honor and respect
40. ridiculing-slightly contemptuous banter; making fun of
41. reflective-illustrating innermost thoughts and emotions
42. sarcastic-sneering, caustic
43. sardonic-scornfully and bitterly sarcastic
44. satiric-ridiculing to show weakness in order to make a point, teach
45. sincere-without deceit or pretense; genuine
46. solemn-deeply earnest, tending toward sad reflection
47. sanguineous -optimistic, cheerful
48. whimsical-odd, strange, fantastic; fun 

Words

Words can be divided up into three components:

  1. Sound—the combination of tones and noises that make up a word.
  2. Connotation—what a word suggests beyond what it expresses. (The difference between childish and childlike, for example).
  3. Denotation—the dictionary meaning of a word.

Imagery

  • Representation through language of sense experience.
  • Most
    commonly represents a visual image, but can also represent a smell, a
    taste, or even an internal sensation like hunger, thirst, or nausea.

Figurative Language

Figurative
language—language using figures of speech, that cannot/should not be
taken literally. Broadly defined, a figure of speech is a way of saying
something other than in the ordinary way.

Metaphor and Simile:
both a means of comparing two things that are unalike. The only
difference is in phrasing—similes use phrases such as: like, as,
resembles, or seems. In a metaphor the comparison is implied.

Personification: giving the attributes of a human being to an animal, object, or concept.

Apostrophe: addressing someone absent or dead or nonhuman as if that person or thing were present and could reply.

Synecdoche:
a figure of speech in which a part is substituted for a whole or a
whole for a part, as in 50 head of cattle for 50 cows, or the army for
a soldier.

Metonymy: a figure of
speech in which an attribute or a suggestive word is substituted for
the name of something, as in “The Crown” for “the monarchy”.

Symbol:
Roughly defined as something that means more than what it is. Something
that stands in the place of another thing. A symbol can be as simple as
the color red representing “stop” or as complex and culturally loaded
as an eagle.

Allegory is a
narrative or description that has a second meaning beneath the surface
one. It is a less common literary device than it once was.

Paradox: An apparent contradiction that is somehow true. Shock value that startles the reader.

Hyperbole: Deliberate exaggeration for effect. “You could have knocked me over with a feather”).

Irony:

  • Verbal/Sarcasm: Saying one thing and meaning another.
  • Dramatic: device where the author implies a different meaning from the one intended by the speaker.
  • Situational: a situation where there is an incongruity between what is anticipated and what actually happens.

Musical Devices

Alliteration: repetition of initial consonant sounds.

Consonance: repetition of final consonant sounds.

Assonance: repetition of vowel sounds.

Rhyme: repetition of the accented vowel sound and all succeeding sounds.

  • Internal: Rhyme within a line.
  • End: Rhymes at the end of lines.
  • Approximate Rhyme: words with sound familiarity.

Rhythm and Meter¹

  • Meter is consistent rhythm, something that we can tap our feet to. Meter comes from the term “to measure”.
  • Foot: one accented syllable with one, two, three or zero unaccented syllables.

Iamb: unstressed/stressed (Today)
"when I have FEARS that I may CEASE to BE" (John Keats)

Trochee: stressed/unstressed (Daily)
"PIping DOWN the VALleys WILD" (William Blake)

Anapest: Unstressed/unstressed/stressed (intervene)
"twas the NIGHT before CHRISTmas and ALL through the HOUSE" (Clement Moore)

Dactyl: Stressed/unstressed/unstressed (Yesterday)
"Grand go the years in the Crescent above them/ Worlds scoop their arcs/ and firmaments row" (Emily Dickinson)

Spondee: Stressed/stressed (True-blue)

Other Terms

Allusion: a reference to something in history or previous literature.

Tone:
A writer or speaker’s attitude toward his subject, her audience, or
his/herself. It is the emotional coloring and emotional meaning of the
words and phrases used.

Stanza: A group of lines within a poem (functions like a paragraph in prose).

Juxtaposition: Deliberately placing dissimilar things side by side for comparison.

Free Verse: poetry in lines of irregular length, usually unrhymed.

Blank Verse: unrhymed iambic pentameter; that is, with every second syllable stressed.

Closed Form:
A type of form or structure in poetry characterized by regularity and
consistency in such elements as rhyme, line length, and metrical
pattern.

Open Form-A type of
structure or form in poetry characterized by freedom from regularity
and consistency in such elements as rhyme, line length, metrical
pattern, and overall poetic structure.

Falling Meter-Poetic meters such as trochaic and dactylic that move or fall from a stressed to an unstressed syllable.

Rising Meter. Poetic meters such as iambic and anapestic that move or ascend from an unstressed to a stressed syllable.

Speaker:
Distinct from the author of the poem. The writer may have chosen
another “character” to be the speaker of the lines. Do not assume that
biographical sounding poetry is necessarily from the author’s point of
view.

Enjambment– a line of poetry in which the grammatical and logical sense run on, without pause, into the next line or lines.

Onomatopoeia– words (or the use of words) that sound like what they mean.

Allegory
A symbolic narrative in which the surface details imply a secondary
meaning. Allegory often takes the form of a story in which the
characters represent moral qualities.

Caesura: A strong pause within a line of verse.

The Sonnet

· 14 lines, iambic pentameter (easy to remember as 10 syllables per line)
· English Sonnet(Shakespearean)

  • Three four line quatrains, and one 2 line couplet
  • Typically, the couplet reverses, alters, or challenges the meaning of the preceding 12 lines in an ironic twist.
  • The rhyme scheme is ABAB CDCD EFEF GG.

· Italian Sonnet (Petrarchan)

  • One eight line octet and one 6 line sestet.
  • Typically, the octet poses a dilemma that is answered in the sestet.
  • The rhyme schme is ABBAABBA CDECDE.

· Spenserian Sonnet

  • A variant on the Shakespearean sonnet, with four quatrains with interlocked rhyme scheme.
  • The rhyme scheme is ABAB BCBC CDCD EE.

The Villanelle

  • Nineteen lines, 5 three line stanzas followed by one four line stanza.
  • Usually tetrameter (4 beats) or pentameter (5 beats).
  • Alternating end rhymes patterned aba, aba, aba, aba, abaa, although not all vilanelles rhyme.
  • Lines 1,6,12, and 18 are the same.
  • Lines 3, 9,15, and 19 are the same.
  • Usually nostalgic in tone.

Poetic Genres

  • Epic: a long serious narrative poem concerning a heroic figure or group of heroes (Beowulf).
  • Lyric: poems written in subjectively rich voice, often emotional. Sound quality is emphasized.
  • Ode: a formal lyric poem of exalted emotion celebrating someone or something.
  • Elegy: a poetic lament for the dead or missing.
  • Prose Poem: form of free verse that lacks the formal shape of poetry.
  • Narrative: a poem that tells a story.
  • Ballad: a story told in verse, without much detail or setting. The primary emphasis is action.
  • Haiku: a short poem with seventeen syllables, usually written in three lines with the following syllable pattern (5,7,5).
  • Cinquain:
    a five-line poem with two syllables in the first line, four in the
    second, six in the third, eight in the fourth, and two in the fifth.
  • Concrete Poetry: a picture poem, in which the visual shape of the poem contributes to its meaning.

What is Close Reading?

To
do a close reading, you choose a specific passage and analyze it in
fine detail, as if with a magnifying glass. You then comment on points
of style and on your reactions as a reader. Close reading is important
because it is the building block for larger analysis. Your thoughts
evolve not from someone else’s truth about the reading, but from your
own observations. The more closely you can observe the more original
and exact your ideas will be. To begin your close reading, ask yourself
several specific questions about the passage. The following questions
are not a formula, but a starting point for your own thoughts. When you
arrive at some answers, you are ready to organize and write. You should
organize your close reading like any other kind of essay, paragraph by
paragraph, but you can arrange it any way you like.

First Impressions

  • What is the first thing you notice about the passage?
  • What is the second thing?
  • Do the two things you noticed complement each other? Or contradict each other?
  • What mood does the passage create in you? Why?

Vocabulary and Diction

  • Which words do you notice first? Why? What is noteworthy about this diction?
  • How do the important words relate to one another?
  • Do any words seem oddly used to you? Why?
  • Do any words have double meanings? Do they have extra connotations?
  • Look up any unfamiliar words. For a pre-20th century text, look in the //Oxford English Dictionary// for possible outdated meanings. (The OED
    can only be accessed by students with a subscription or from a library
    computer that has a subscription. Otherwise, you should find a copy in
    the local library.)

Discerning Patterns

  • Does an image here remind you of an image elsewhere in the book? Where? What’s the connection?
  • How might this image fit into the pattern of the book as a whole?
  • Could
    this passage symbolize the entire work? Could this passage serve as a
    microcosm–a little picture–of what’s taking place in the whole work?
  • What
    is the sentence rhythm like? Short and choppy? Long and flowing? Does
    it build on itself or stay at an even pace? What is the style like?
  • Look at the punctuation. Is there anything unusual about it?
  • Is there any repetition within the passage? What is the effect of that repetition?
  • How
    many types of writing are in the passage? (For example, narration,
    description, argument, dialogue, rhymed or alliterative poetry, etc.)
  • Can you identify paradoxes in the author’s thought or subject?
  • What is left out or kept silent? What would you expect the author to talk about that the author avoided?

Point of View and Characterization

  • How does the passage make us react or think about any characters or events within the narrative?
  • Are there colors, sounds, physical description that appeals to the senses? Does this imagery form a pattern? Why might the author have chosen that color, sound or physical description?
  • Who speaks in the passage? To whom does he or she speak? Does the narrator have a limited or partial point of view?
    Or does the narrator appear to be omniscient, and he knows things the
    characters couldn’t possibly know? (For example, omniscient narrators
    might mention future historical events, events taking place "off
    stage," the thoughts and feelings of multiple characters, and so on).

Symbolism

  • Are there metaphors? What kinds?
  • Is there
    one controlling metaphor? If not, how many different metaphors are
    there, and in what order do they occur? How might that be significant?
  • How might objects represent something else?
  • Do
    any of the objects, colors, animals, or plants appearing in the passage
    have traditional connotations or meaning? What about religious or
    biblical significance?
  • If there are multiple symbols in the work, could we read the entire passage as having allegorical meaning beyond the literal level?