Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms 1.Meter: the rhythmical pattern of a poem. This pattern is...
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Transcript of Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms 1.Meter: the rhythmical pattern of a poem. This pattern is...
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms1. Meter:
the rhythmical pattern of a poem. This
pattern is determined by the number and types of stresses, or beats, in each line. To describe the meter of a poem,
you must scan its lines. Scanning involves marking the stressed and
unstressed syllables.
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms1A. (add this to your paper)
PROSE the ordinary form of written language,
without metrical structure, as distinguished from poetry or verse. But
remember: this is NOT blank verse!
Example from Act 1:
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms2. Alliteration:
the repetition of initial consonant sounds. Writers use alliteration to give emphasis to
words, to imitate sounds, and to create musical effects.
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms3. Foil:
a character in a story that acts in a drastically different way than the main protagonist in order to show the strong
differences between the characters.
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms4. Speaker:
the imaginary voice assumed by the writer of a poem. In many poems the speaker
is not identified by name. When reading a poem, remember that the speaker within the poem may be a person, an
animal, a thing, or an abstraction.
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms5. Major character:
a character that plays a major role in the story but is not necessarily the main character (protagonist). Most major
characters are round characters.
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms6. Minor character:
the character(s) in a story who are not the main point of the story (for instance, not the person who the story is happening TO), but still interact with or grab the attention of those main characters.
Most minor characters are flat characters.
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms7. Stock character:
a fictional character based on a common literary or social stereotype. Stock
characters rely heavily on cultural types or names for their personality, manner of speech, and other characteristics. Stock characters make easy targets for parody,
which will likely exaggerate any stereotypes associated with these characters.
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms
8. Monologue:
a speech by one character in a play, story, or poem.
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms9. Personification:
a type of figurative language in which a nonhuman subject is given human
characteristics.
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms10. Pun:
the humorous use of a word or phrase so as to emphasize or suggest its different meanings or applications, or the use of
words that are alike or nearly alike in sound but different in meaning, a play on words.
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms
11. Dramatic irony:
when the audience (reader)knows something the character(s) do not.
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms12. Soliloquy:
a long speech expressing the thoughts of a character alone on stage.
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms13. Aside:
a short speech delivered by an actor in a play; expressing the character’s thoughts. Traditionally, the aside is directed to the
audience and is presumed to be inaudible to the other actors.
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms14. Imagery:
the descriptive or figurative language used in literature to create word pictures for the
reader. These pictures, or images, are created by details of sight, sound, taste,
touch, smell or movement.
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms15. Tragedy:
a work of literature, especially a play, that results in a catastrophe for the main
character(s).
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms16. Denotation:
The direct meaning of a word or phrase; a word that signifies something specific.
Shakespearean Drama Literary Terms17. Connotation:
The suggesting of different meanings by a word or expression apart from its literal meaning that is suggested or implied.