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(Expect this list of terms to grow as the
semester progresses.)
allegorya
narrative in which each of the characters, in addition to the
meaning he or she has in the story, possesses another significance
which lies outside the story; further, all of these outer meanings,
taken together, have the same relationships and conflicts as exist
among the characters within the story.
analogue
one narrative whose structural design
or plot resembles another's for which it may have served as a model
without actually being a source.
beast fable
an allegory in which a story
ostensibly about animal characters serves to satirize or to point a
moral about the ways of humans.
catastrophe
in tragedy, the final, irreversible
defeat of the protagonist.
climax
in tragedy, the pivotal decision of
the protagonist which begins his (or her) descent into ultimate
failure (the catastrophe); because the fate of the play depends upon
it, the moment of this decision is often--but not always--one of
great emotional intensity.
courtly love
a literary convention which described
an adulterous relationship between persons of high social rank; the
lady, who was married to someone other than her courtly lover, held
dominance in the relationship, and the knightly lover became her
perfectly obedient, life-long vassal, totally committed to
preserving her honor by his utmost secrecy and discretion. Example:
Guinevere and Launcelot.
crisis
in tragedy, the point in the
escalating tensions between the goals and passions of the
protagonist and the conflicting forces when the protagonist must
make a fundamental, risk-everything choice (the climax). See also
"turning point."
elegy
a poem of mourning for human mortality, often expressing grief at
the death of a specific individual but always addressing the experience
all people share, as well.
epic
a narrative poem of considerable length recounting the exploits of a
single great hero, and perhaps of others associated with him.
exemplum
a narrative told specifically for the
purpose of making the point of a homily; frequently the exemplum
forms the main part of the homily.
exposition
1.in drama--the first segment of the
play which sets the tone and introduces the characters and the
conflict.
2. in fiction--that part of the story which is reported rather than
presented in dialogue and action; distinguished from "scene."
3. in rhetoric--prose which explains and clarifies concepts,
structures, or processes; distinguished from description and
narration.
fabliau
a short, humourous, and earthy
narrative, often bordering on the obscene.
falling action
in tragedy, the segment of the play
between the climax and the catastrope; the protagonist's luck has
gone bad, but he (or she) continues the struggle and there is some
false hope for success.
frame narrative
a story--that is, a construction of
characters, setting, and plot--that includes in it the telling of
one or more distinct other stories.
irony
a perceivable and perceived difference
between what appears to be and what is, between what is said and the
intended meaning, between what is intended or expected and what
actually happens.
rising action
that part of a tragic plot in which
the action appears to be moving toward the protagonist's articulated
goals.
romance
a relatively long, loosely structured
narrative about knights and ladies, motivated by love of adventure,
religious zeal, or romantic love, and marked by marvelous and
magical events.
source
an earlier work which a later author
remakes as a new story, play, or poem; the term refers only to the
work an author actually uses, not merely to one which is similar.
turning point
the moment in tragedy when the
protagonist's fortunes manifestly shift from good to bad, as an
immediate consequence of the crisis and the climax.
zodiac
the apparent daily path of the sun
perceived as transiting a circular orbit within a hollow sphere on
which the constellations were fixed; the 360° circle is divided into
twelve 30° arcs, and in each arc the sun passes one of the
constellations of the zodiac, starting each year with Ares, the ram,
at the beginning of spring.
Questions?
Phone: (973)-618-3436 e-mail:
brigid@caldwell.edu
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