Aesthetic distance(also called
distance): degree of
emotional
involvement in a work of art. The most obvious example of aesthetic
distance (also referred to simply as distance) occurs with
paintings. Some paintings require us to stand back to see the design of
the whole painting; standing close, we see the technique of the
painting, say the brush strokes, but not the whole. Other paintings
require us to stand close to see the whole; their design and any
figures become less clear as we move back from the painting.
Similarly, fiction, drama, and poetry
involve the reader emotionally to different degrees. Emotional
distance, or the lack of it, can be seen with children watching a TV
program or a movie; it becomes real for them. Writers like Dickens,
the Brontẽ sisters, or Faulkner pull the reader into their work; the
reader identifies closely with the characters and is fully involved
with the happenings. Hemingway, on the other hand, maintains a greater
emotional distance from the reader.
Alliteration: the repetition of the
same sound at the beginning of a word, such as the repetition of b
sounds in Keats's "beaded bubbles winking at the brim"
("Ode to a Nightingale") or Coleridge's "Five miles meandering
in a mazy motion ("Kubla Khan"). A common use for
alliteration is emphasis. It occurs in everyday speech in such phrases
as "tittle-tattle," "bag and baggage," "bed and board," "primrose
path," and "through thick and thin" and in sayings like "look before
you leap."
Some literary critics call the
repetition
of any sounds alliteration. However, there are specialized
terms for other sound-repetitions. Consonance repeats
consonants, but not the vowels, as in horror-hearer.
Assonance is the repetition of vowel sounds, please-niece-ski-tree.
See rhyme.
An allusion: a brief reference to a
person, event, place, or phrase. The writer assumes will recognize the
reference. For instance, most of us would know the difference between a
mechanic's being as reliable as George Washington or as reliable as
Benedict Arnold. Allusions that are commonplace for readers in one era
may require footnotes for readers in a later time.
Ambiguity: (1) a statement which
has two or more possible meanings; (2) a statement whose meaning is
unclear. Depending on the circumstances, ambiguity can be negative,
leading to confusion or even disaster (the ambiguous wording of a
general's note led to the deadly charge of the Light Brigade in the
Crimean War). On the other hand, writers often use it to achieve
special effects, for instance, to reflect the complexity of an issue or
to indicate the difficulty, perhaps the impossibility, of determining
truth.
The title of the country song "Heaven's
Just a Sin Away" is deliberately ambiguous; at a religious level, it
means that committing a sin keeps us out of heaven, but at a physical
level, it means that committing a sin (sex) will bring heaven
(pleasure). Many of Hamlet's statements to the King, to Rosenkrantz and
Guildenstern, and to other characters are deliberately ambiguous, to
hide his real purpose from them.
Ballad: a relatively short narrative
poem, written to be sung, with a simple and dramatic action. The
ballads tell of love, death, the supernatural, or a combination of
these. Two characteristics of the ballad are incremental repetition
and the ballad stanza. Incremental repetition repeats one or more lines
with small but significant variations that advance the action. The
ballad stanza is four lines; commonly, the first and third lines
contain four feet or accents, the second and fourth lines contain three
feet. Ballads often open abruptly,
present brief descriptions, and use concise dialogue.
The folk ballad is usually
anonymous and the presentation impersonal. The literary ballad
deliberately imitates the form and spirit of a folk ballad. The
Romantic poets were attracted to this form, as Longfellow with "The
Wreck of the Hesperus," Coleridge with the "Rime of the Ancient
Mariner" (which is longer and more elaborate than the folk balad) and
Keats with "La Belle Dame sans Merci" (which more closely resembles the
folk ballad).
Characterization: the way an author
presents characters. In direct presentation, a character is described
by the author, the narrator or the other characters. In indirect
presentation, a character's traits are revealed by action and speech.
Characters can be discussed in a
number of ways.
- The protagonist is the
main character, who is not necessarily a hero or a heroine. The antagonist
is the opponent; the antagonist may be society, nature, a person, or an
aspect of the protagonist. The antihero, a recent type, lacks
or seems to lack heroic traits.
- A persona is a fictional
character. Sometimes the term means the mask or alter-ego of the
author; it is often used for first person works and lyric poems, to
distinguish the writer of the work from the character in the work.
- Characters may be classified as round (three-dimensional,
fully developed) or as flat (having only a few traits or only enough
traits to fulfill their function in the work); as developing (dynamic)
characters or as static characters.
- A foil is a secondary
character who contrasts with a major character; in Hamlet, Laertes and
Fortinbras, whose fathers have been killed, are foils for Hamlet.
Convention: (1) a rule or practice
based upon general consent and upheld by society at large; (2) an
arbitrary rule or practice recognized as valid in any particular art or
discipline, such as literature or art (NED). For example, when we read
a comic book, we accept that a light bulb appearing above the head of a
comic book character means the character suddently got an idea.
- Literary convention: a
practice or device which is accepted as a necessary, useful, or given
feature of a genre, e.g., the proscenium stage (the "picture-frame"
stage of most theaters), a soliloquy, the epithet or boast in the epic
(which those of you who took Core Studies 1 will be familiar with).
- Stock character: character types of a genre, e.g.,
the heroine disguised as a man in Elizabethan drama, the confidant, the
hardboiled detective, the tightlipped sheriff, the girl next door, the
evil hunters in a Tarzan movie, ethnic or racial stereotypes, the cruel
stepmother and Prince Charming in fairy tales.
- Stock situation: frequently recurring sequence of
action in a genre, e.g., rags-to-riches, boy-meets-girl, the eternal
triangle, the innocent proves himself or herself.
- Stock response: a habitual or automatic response
based on the reader's beliefs or feelings, rather than on the work
itself. A moralistic person might be shocked by any sexual scene and
condemn a book or movie as dirty; a sentimentalist is automatically
moved by any love story, regardless of the quality of the writing or
the acting; someone requiring excitement may enjoy any violent story or
movie, regardless of how mindless, unmotivated or brutal the violence
is.
Fiction: prose narrative based on
imagination, usually the novel or the short story.
Genre: a literary species or form,
e.g., tragedy, epic, comedy, novel, essay, biography, lyric poem. Click
here for a fuller discussion of genres.
Irony: the discrepancy between what is
said and what is meant, what is said and what is done, what is expected
or intended and what happens, what is meant or said and what others
understand. Sometimes irony is classified into types: in situational
irony, expectations aroused by a situation are reversed; in cosmic
irony or the irony of fate, misfortune is the result of
fate, chance, or God; in dramatic irony. the audience knows
more than the characters in the play, so that words and action have
additional meaning for the audience; Socractic irony is named
after Socrates' teaching method, whereby he assumes ignorance and
openness to opposing points of view which turn out to be (he shows them
to be) foolish. Click here for examples of
irony.
Irony is often confused with sarcasm and
satire:
- Sarcasm is one kind of irony; it
is praise which is really an insult; sarcasm generally invovles malice,
the desire to put someone down, e.g., "This is my brilliant son, who
failed out of college."
- Satire is the exposure of the
vices or follies of an indiviudal, a group, an institution, an idea, a
society, etc., usually with a view to correcting it. Satirists
frequently use irony.
Language can be classified in a
number of ways.
- Denotation: the literal meaning
of a word; there are no emotions, values, or images associated with
denotative meaning. Scientific and mathematical language carries few,
if any emotional or connotative meanings.
- Connotation: the emotions, values, or images
associated with a word. The intensity of emotions or the power of the
values and images associated with a word varies. Words connected with
religion, politics, and sex tend to have the strongest feelings and
images associated with them.
For most people, the word mother calls up
very strong positive feelings and associations--loving,
self-sacrificing, always there for you, understanding; the denotative
meaning, on the other hand, is simply "a female animal who has borne
one or more chldren." Of course connotative meanings do not necessarily
reflect reality; for instance, if someone said, "His mother is not very
motherly," you would immediately understand the difference between motherly
(connotation) and mother (denotation).
- Abstract language refers to
things that are intangilble, that is, which are perceived not through
the senses but by the mind, such as truth, God, education, vice,
transportation, poetry, war, love. Concrete language identifies
things perceived through the senses (touch, smell, sight, hearing, and
taste), such as soft, stench, red, loud, or bitter.
- Literal language means
exactly what it says; a rose is the physical flower. Figurative
language changes the literal meaning, to make a meaning fresh or
clearer, to express complexity, to capture a physical or sensory
effect, or to extend meaning. Figurative language is also called
figures of speech. The most common figures of speech are these:
- A simile: a comparison of
two dissimilar things using "like" or "as", e.g., "my love is like a
red, red rose" (Robert Burns).
- A metaphor: a
comparison of two dissimilar things which does not use "like" or "as,"
e.g., "my love is a red, red rose" (Lilia Melani).
- Personification:
treating abstractions or inanimate objects as human, that is, giving
them human attributes, powers, or feelings, e.g., "nature wept" or "the
wind whispered many truths to me."
- hyperbole:
exaggeration, often extravagant; it may be used for serious or for
comic effect.
- Apostrophe: a direct
address to a person, thing, or abstraction, such as "O Western Wind,"
or "Ah, Sorrow, you consume us." Apostrophes are generally capitalized.
- Onomatopoeia: a
word whose sounds seem to duplicate the sounds they describe--hiss,
buzz, bang, murmur, meow, growl.
- Oxymoron: a statement
with two parts which seem contradictory; examples: sad joy, a wise
fool, the sound of silence, or Hamlet's saying, "I must be cruel only
to be kind"
- Elevated language or elevated
style: formal, dignitifed language; it often uses more elaborate
figures of speech. Elevated language is used to give dignity to a hero
(note the speechs of heros like Achilles or Agamemnon in the Iliad),
to express the superiority of God and religious matters generally (as
in prayers or in the King James version of the Bible), to indicate the
importance of certain events (the ritual language of the traditional
marriage ceremony), etc. It can also be used to reveal a self-important
or a pretentious character, for humor and/or for satire.
Lyric Poetry: a short poem with one
speaker (not necessarily the poet) who expresses thought and feeling.
Though it is sometimes used only for a brief poem about feeling (like
the sonnet).it is more often applied to a
poem expressing the complex evolution of thoughts and feeling, such as
the elegy, the dramatic monologue, and the ode. The
emotion is or seems personal In classical Greece, the lyric was a poem
written to be sung, accompanied by a lyre. Click here for a discussion
of Reading Lyric Poetry.
Meter: a rhythm of accented and
unaccented syllables which are organized into patterns, called feet.
In English poetry, the most common meters are these:
- Iambic: a foot consisting of an
unaccented and accented syllable. Shakespeare often uses iambic, for
example the beginning of Hamlet's speech (the accented syllables are
italicized), "To be or not to be. Listen for
the accents in this line from Marlowe, "Come live with me
and be my love." English seems to fall naturally into
iambic patterns, for it is the most common meter in English.
- Trochaic: a foot consisting of an accented and
unaccented syllable. Longfellow's Hiawatha uses this meter,
which can quickly become singsong (the accented syllable is
italicized):
"By the shores of GitcheGumee
By the shining Big-Sea-water."
The three witches' speech in Macbeth uses it: "Double, double,
toil and trouble."
- Anapestic: a foot consisting of two unaccented
syllables and an accented syllable. These lines from Shelley's Cloud
are anapestic:
"Like a child from the womb, like
a ghost from the tomb
I arise and unbuild it again."
- Dactylic: a foot consisting of an accented
syllable and two unaccented syllables, as in these words: swimingly,
mannikin, openly.
- Spondee: a foot consisting of two accented
syllables, as in the word heartbreak. In English, this foot is
used occasionally, for variety or emphasis.
- Pyrrhic: a foot consisting of two unaccented
syllables, generally used to vary the rhythm.
A line is named for the number of feet it
contains: monometer: one foot, dimeter: two feet, trimeter:
three feet, tetrameter: four feet, pentameter: five
feet, hexameter: six feet, heptameter: seven feet.
The most common
metrical lines in English are tetrameter (four feet) and pentameter
(five feet). Shakespeare frequently uses unrhymed iambic pentameter in
his plays; the technical name for this line is blank verse. In
this course, I will not be asking you to identify meters and metrical
lines, but I would like you to have some awareness of their existence.
Modern English poetry is metrical,
i.e., it relies on accented and unaccented syllables. Not all poetry
does; Anglo-Saxon poetry relied on a system of alliteration. Skillful
poets rarely use one meter throughout a poem but use these meters in
combinations; however, a poem generally has one dominant meter.
Ode: usually a lyric poem of moderate
length, with a serious subject, an elevated style, and an elaborate
stanza pattern.There are various kinds of odes, which we don't have to
worry about in an introductiory course like this. The ode often praises
people, the arts of music and poetry, natural scenes, or abstract
concepts. The Romantic poets used the ode to explore both personal or
general problems; they often started with a meditation on something in
nature, as did Keats in "Ode to a Nightingale" or Shelley in"Ode to the
West Wind." Click here for a fuller discussion of the ode.
Paradox: a statement whose two parts
seem contradictory yet make sense with more thought. Christ used
paradox in his teaching: "They have ears but hear not." Or in ordinary
conversation, we might use a paradox, "Deep down he's really very
shallow." Paradox attracts the reader's or the listener's attention and
gives emphasis.
Point of view: the perspective from which
the story is told.
A narrator may be trustworthy or untrustworthy,
involved or uninvolved. Click here for an illustration of these points
of view in the story of Sleeping Beauty.
Rhyme:the repetition of similar sounds.
In poetry, the most common kind of rhyme is end rhyme, which
occurs at the end of two or mroe lines. Internal rhyme occurs
in the middle of a line, as in these lines from Coleridge, "In mist or cloud,
on mast or shroud" or "Whiles all the night through fog-smoke white"
("The Ancient Mariner"). There are many kinds of end rhyme:
- True rhyme is what most people
think of as rhyme; the sounds are nearly identical--notion, motion,
potion, for example.
- Weak rhyme, also called slant, oblique,
approximate, or half rhyme, refers to words with similar
but not identical sounds, e.g., notion-nation, bear-bore, ear-are.
Emily Dickinson frequently uses partial rhymes.
- Eye rhyme occurs when words look alike but don't
sound alike--e.g., bear-ear.
Sonnet: a lyric poem consisting of
fourteen lines. In English, generally the two basic kinds of sonnets
are the Italian or Petrarchan sonnet and the Shakespearean or
Elizabethan sonnet. The Italian/Petrarchan sonnet is named after
Petrarch, an Italian Renaissance poet. The Petrarchan sonnet
consists of an octave (eight lines) and a sestet (six lines). The Shakespearean
sonnet consists of three quatrains (four lines each) and a
concluding couplet (two lines). The Petrarian sonnet tends to divide
the thought into two parts; the Shakespearean, into four.
Structure: framework of a work of
literature; the organization or over-all design of a work. The
structure of a play may fall into logical divisions and also a
mechanical division of acts and scenes. Groups of stories may be set in
a larger structure or frame, like The Canterbury Tales, The
Decameron, or The Arabian Tales.
Style: manner of expression; how a
speaker or writer says what he says. Notice the difference in style of
the opening paragraphs of Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms and
Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn:
In the late
summer of that year we lived in a house in a village that looked across
the river and the plain to the mountains. In the bed of the river there
were pebbles and boulders, dry and white in the sun, and the water was
clear and swiftly moving and blue in the channels. Troops went by the
house and down the road and the dust they raised powdered the leaves of
the trees. The trunks of the trees too were dusty and the leaves fell
early that year and we saw the troops marching along the road and the
dust rising and leaves, stirred by the breeze, falling and the soldiers
marching and afterward the road bare and white except for the leaves.
You don't know
about me without you have read a book by the name of The Adventures
of Tom Sawyer; but that ain't no matter. That book was made by Mr.
Mark Twain, and he told the truth, mainly. There was things which he
stretched, but mainly he told the truth.
Symbol: in general terms, anything
that stands for something else. Obvious examples are flags, which
symbolize a nation; the cross is a symbol for Christianity; Uncle Sam a
symbol for the United States. In literature, a symbol is expected to
have significance. Keats starts his ode with a real nightingale, but
quickly it becomes a symbol, standing for a life of pure, unmixed joy;
then before the end of the poem it becomes only a bird again.
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, etc.
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. Sometimes the
theme is also called the motif. Themes in Hamlet
include the nature of filial duty and the dilemma of the idealist in a
non-ideal situation. A theme
in Keats's "Ode to a Nightingale" is the difficulty of correlating the
ideal and the real.
Tragedy: broadly defined, a
literary and particularly a dramatic presentation of serious actions in
which the chief character has a disastrous fate. There are many
different kinds and theories of tragedy, starting with the Greeks and
Aristotle's definition in The Poetics, "the imitation of an
action that is serious and also, as having magnitude, complete in
itself...with incidents arousing pity and fear, wherewith to accomplish
its catharsis of such emotions." In the Middle Ages, tragedy merely
depicted a decline from happiness to misery because of some flaw or
error of judgment. Click here for a fuller discussion of tragedy and the
tragic vision.
Core Studies 6 Page || Melani Home Page
This page was last modified on Tuesday, August 7, 2012.
|