Literary Terms #2, Irony and Tone

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Paradox

"Fair is foul and foul is fair" Shakespeare

Paradox

"For when I am weak, then I am strong" St. Paul

Litotes

"He is not unfriendly."

Paradox

"My only love sprung from my only hate!" Shakespeare

Paradox

"The child is the father of the man" Wordsworth

Oxymoron

"bitter sweet"

Oxymoron

"jumbo shrimp"

Oxymoron

"loving hate"

Oxymoron

"pleasing pains"

Oxymoron

"wise fool"

Litotes

A form of understatement in which a statement is affirmed by negating its opposite.

Satire

A kind of literature that ridicules human folly or vice with the purpose of bringing about reform or of keeping others from falling into similar folly or vice.

Oxymoron

A self-contradictory combination of words or smaller verbal units; usually noun-noun, adjective-adjective, adverb-adverb, or adverb-verb.

Irony

A situation or a use of language involving some kind of incongruity or discrepancy.

Paradox

A statement which seems on its face to be self-contradictory or absurd, yet turns out to make good sense.

Horatian Satire

Aldous Huxley's Brave New World,

Horatian Satire

Alexander Pope's verse satires; "The Rape of the Lock"

Ambiguity

Allows for two or more simultaneous interpretations of a word, phrase, action, or situation, all of which can be supported by the context of a work.

Juvenalian Satire

Anthony Burgess' A Clockwork Orange

Horatian Satire

C.S.Lewis's Screwtape Letters

Juvenalian Satire

Formal satire in which the speaker attacks vice and error with contempt and indignation; harsh and realistic.

Oxymoron

From the Greek meaning "sharp-dull"

Hyperbole (Overstatement)

Frost's "The Road Not Taken" "I shall be telling this with a sigh/ Somewhere ages and ages hence"

Juvenalian Satire

George Orwell's 1984

Horatian Satire

George Orwell's Animal Farm,

Ambiguity

Ghost in Emily Bronte's "Wuthering Heights"

Ambiguity

Ghost in Henry James's "The Turn of the Screw."

Ambiguity

Ghosts or other supernatural creatures in literary fiction... is the character hallucinating or is that supernatural being really there?

Litotes

He is not the cleverest person I have ever met.

Sarcasm

If a student says, "I don't understand," and the teacher replies, with a tone of heavy disgust in his voice, "Well, I wouldn't expect you to."

Irony

If, after you have done particularly well on an exam, and your teacher hands out your test saying, "Here's some bad news for you: you all got A's and B's!"

Understatement

If, upon sitting down to a loaded dinner plate, you say, "This looks like a nice snack,"

Situational Irony

In "The Most Dangerous Game," it is ironic that Rainsford, "the celebrated hunter," should become the hunted, this is a reversal of his expected and appropriate role.

Horatian Satire

Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels,

Juvenalian Satire

Jonathan Swift's uncompromisingly disgusted tone; "A Modest Proposal"

Juvenalian Satire

Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451

Juvenalian Satire

Samuel Johnson's "London,"

Juvenalian Satire

Samuel Johnson's poems London (1738) and The Vanity of Human Wishes (1749)

Horatian Satire

Satire in which the voice is indulgent, tolerant, amused, and witty. The speaker holds up to gentle ridicule the absurdities and follies of human beings, aiming at producing in the reader a wry smile.

Litotes

She is not unlike her mother.

Hyperbole (Overstatement)

Tennyson's "The Eagle" "Close to the sun in lonely lands,"

Dramatic Irony

The author lets the audience or reader in on a character's situation while the character himself remains in the dark.

Situational Irony

The discrepancy is between appearance and reality, or between expectation and fulfillment, or between what is and what would seem appropriate.

Cosmic Irony

The perception of fate of the universe as malicious or indifferent to human suffering, which creates a painful contrast between our purposeful activity and its ultimate meaninglessness.

Verbal Irony

The use of a statement that, by its context, implies the opposite.

Litotes

They do not seem the happiest couple around.

Ambiguity

Used unintentionally, it obscures meaning and can confuse readers.

Juvenalian Satire

William Golding's Lord of the Flies

Litotes

Your apartment is not unclean.

Sarcasm

a particularly blunt form of verbal irony.

Sarcasm

bitter or cutting speech intended to wound the feelings (it comes from a Greek word meaning to tear the flesh).

Hyperbole (Overstatement)

exaggeration, but exaggeration in the service of truth. It may be humorous, grave, fanciful or restrained, convincing or unconvincing.

Understatement

from Artemus Ward... but if you say that a man who holds his hand for half an hour in a lighted fire will experience "a sensation of excessive and disagreeable warmth."

Verbal Irony

in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, Antony repeats, "Brutus is an honorable man," while clearly implying that Brutus is dishonorable.

Dramatic Irony

in Sophocle's Oedipus Rex, when Oedipus vows to discover his father's murderer, not knowing, as the audience does, that he himself is the murderer.

Irony

is neither cruel or kind: it is simply a device, like a surgeon's scalpel, for performing an operation more skillfully.

Understatement

saying less than one means, may exist in what one says or merely in how one says it.

Paradox

teases the mind and tests the limits of language; it can be a potent device.

Dramatic Irony

the character's words or actions carry a significance that the character is not aware of.

Dramatic Irony

the contrast is between what a character says or thinks and what the reader knows to be true.

Irony

tool used in sarcasm and satire

Paradox

useful in poetry because it arrests a reader's attention by its seemingly stubborn refusal to make sense.


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