21st Century Literature: 2nd Quarter Reviewer

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Plot Character Hook Slam-bang Finish

Elements of Flash Fiction

Non-linear Novel

Events are portrayed out of chronological order or in other ways where the narrative does not follow the direct causality pattern of events featured

Advanced Technology Extraterrestrial Organisms Unexplained Phenomenon Space Travels Alien Civilizations with Advanced spacecraft Teleportation or Telekinesis

Events cannot be explained accurately by science (not the genre, but the events)

Seeks Interaction

Examples: Dora Series, A Series of Unfortunate Events, Fleabag

Six-word Story

Has a subject and a verb that give the reader a sense of what's happened and a bit of conflict

Post-Apocalyptic Fiction

How people deal with an apocalyptic world

Surprise

How writer plays, with words and ideas

Realistic Fiction

Speculated upon how a character would react to the changes of the world

ou

A Greek word meaning "not"

topos

A Greek word meaning "place"

Speaculative Fiction

A broad genre that encompasses stories that take place in imaginary worlds as a result of one or more "what if...?" questions

Dystopian Fiction

A futuristic world portrayed in a negative way

Utopian Fiction

A genre that originated in book written by Thomas More with the same name

Reader Reading a Story

A novel or movie where a reader reads a novel

The Author is a Character

A practice by authors of writing themselves into their stories, either explicitly or in a thinly disguised form

Six-word Story

A short narrative that can have all of the emotional themes of longer story- from funny to dramatic, sad to scary

Flash Fiction

A very short story

Seeks Interaction

Also known as "breaking the fourth wall"

Merging of Characters

Also known as "crossover fiction"

The Author is a Character

Also known as self-insertion

Six-word Story

An entire story told in six words

Fourth Wall

An imaginary wall that separates the story from the real world

Alternate History

Based on the idea that every decision that is made in our reality, there is another place where the event or decision turned out differently

The citizens are controlled by propaganda Information, independent thought, and freedom are restricted A figurehead or concept is worshipped by the citizens of the society Citizens are perceived to be under surveillance Citizens have a fear of the outside world Citizens live in a dehumanized state The natural world is banished and distrusted Citizens conform to uniform expectation Individuality and dissent are bad The society is an illusion of a perfect utopian world

Characteristic of Dystopian Fiction

Brevity Complete Plot Surprise

Characteristics of Flash Fiction

Seeks Interaction

Characters acknowledges their fictionality, by either directly or indirectly addressing the audience

Narrative Footnote

Commenting on the story while telling it, wither in footnotes or within the text

Science Fiction

Deals mainly with the impact of actual or imagined science upon society and individuals

Apocalyptic Fiction

Deals with the end of civilization either through nuclear war, plague, or some other general disaster.

Character Plot Point of View Setting Style Theme

Elements of Fiction

The Author is a Character Non-linear Novel A Piece Seeking Interaction/Seeks Interaction Narrative Footnote Character/Narrator Exposes Themselves (basta halaba haha) Merging of Characters Writer Writing a Story Parallel Novel Reader Reading a Story

Elements of a Metafiction

Parallel Novel

Examples: Finding Dory, Maleficent, Lightyear

Reader Reading a Story

Examples: Inkheart, The Neverending Story, The History of Don Quixote

Non-Linear Novel

Examples: Kaleidoscope, 500 Days of Summer, Cloud Atlas

The Author is a Character

Examples: Marvel Movies, To All the Boys I've loved before, Dante's Inferno

Narrative Footnote

Examples: Snuff, The Silmarillion, Crazy Rich Asians

Writer Writing a Story

Examples: The Hours, W: Two Worlds, Strange Than Fiction

The Narrator/Character Intentionally or Accidentally Exposes Themselves as the Author

Examples: Titanic, How I Met Your Mother, The Gifted

Merging of Characters

Examples: Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Shrek Forever After

Realistic Fiction

Explores the "what ifs" of character development

Speculative Fiction

Explores the "what ifs" of what is possible in the world

Science Fiction

Far-future space operas or time travel which may seem implausible but still not beyond the realm of a certain theory

Science Fiction

Generally presume elements of the modern world and attempt to predict how they could possible develop

Science Fiction Fantasy Utopian Fiction Dystopian Fiction Apocalyptic Fiction Post-Apocalyptic Fiction Alternate History

Genres/Types of Speculative Fiction

Smoke-long Fiction

In China, flash fiction is called as ___________.

Merging of Characters

Individual stories merge together

Realistic Fiction

Invented stories that can actually happen in real life

Non-linear Novel

It heavily relies on flashforwards, flashbacks, dream sequences, or foreshadowing

Narrative Footnote

It helps provide context, important hints and background information

Speculative Fiction

It is about what the future holds

Speculative Fiction

It is beyond reality

Utopia/Utopian Fiction

It means "no place", "nowhere", "not a place"

Meta

It means self-referential; "about"

Credits

Lists the contributors to the back Contains a writer, an artist, and an inker

Fiction

Literature in the form of prose, especially short stories and novels, that describes imaginary events and people.

Fiction

Made up stories

Comic Book

Mainly used for entertainment purposes

Science Fiction

May be based on or contradict scientific facts

Science Fiction

Most popular type of speculative fiction

The Narrator/Character Intentionally or Accidentally Exposes Themselves as the Author

Narrator is the one controlling or manipulating the story

Narrative Footnote

Notes are placed at the bottom of the page

Fantasy

Often involves a journey or quest

Parallel Novel

One that either takes places within another work, based off of another work, a second work that with another work, or uses the structure and characters of another novel

Slam-bang Finish

Open-ended

Sudden fiction Short-short stories Microfiction Microstories Smoke-long Fiction

Other terms for Flash Fiction

Caption Panel Dialogue Balloons Gutter Thought Bubble

Parts of a Comic Book (Inside)

Main Title Subtitle Credits Cover Image Publisher

Parts of a Comic Book Cover

Dystopian Fiction

Presents a futuristic, imagined worlds in which there is only an illusion of a perfect society

Utopia

Presents a world that is ideally perfect in all aspects of society, where there is no violence, crime nor injustice

Providing supplementary information that goes beyond the narrator's point of view Adding meta-commentary on the story itself Telling a completely distinct and separate story Serving as a simple entertainment

Purposes of a narrative footnote

Non-linear Novel

Reading the novel other that from beginning to end

Fantasy

Result of author's pure imagination

Parallel Novel

Same setting and period, but a minor character now leads the story

Metafiction

Self-consciously addresses the devices of fiction

Post-Apocalyptic Fiction

Set in a world after a disaster

Alternate History

Set in worlds in which one or more historical events unfold differently from how it did in reality

Brevity

Six to 1,000 words; brief and concise

Dystopian Fiction

Society itself is typically the antagonist

Fantasy

Superheroes with might powers

Morsels of Memory

Tackled on the kindness of the narrator's mother towards others even of its languid sinewy body

Sir Thomas More

The author who wrote "Utopia"

Complete Plot

The beginning, middle, end

Metafiction

The character is aware that they are a character in a fictional story

Seeks Interaction

The piece itself seeks interaction with the audience and sees the piece itself as a living entity

What If...

The question being asked in a realistic fiction or speculative fiction

Writer Writing a Story

The role of a character is a writer or author in the story.

Main Title

The title of the comic denoting the series it belongs to

The Narrator/Character Intentionally or Accidentally Exposes Themselves as the Author

There must be a narrator to reveal themselves as an author

Subtitle

Title of the individual issue

Fantasy

Uses magic and supernatural elements in plot, theme, and setting

Youngsters and Children

Usual Audience of a comic book

Fantasy

Usually set in a realm that includes mythical creatures and supernatural powers

1516

Utopia, the book, dated back to ____.

Charlotte Aninion-de Guzman

Who wrote the literature "Morsels of Memory"

Surprise

With a twist

Morsels of Memory

Written by Charlotte Aninion-de Guzman

Fiction

describes the imaginary events and people

Character

one to two

Comic Book

refers to any format that uses a combination of frames, words, and pictures to convey meaning and tell a story.

Hook

to get the attention of readers


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