Literary Terms
Masks
"A thing through which sound comes"
Deus ex Machina
"God out of the machine," when an actor was lowered or lifted to the stage by machine
In medias res
A Latin phrase meaning "in the midst of thins'; refers to the narrative vice of beginning a story in midway in the events it depicts before explaining the context or preceding actions
Summary
A brief condensation of the main idea or plot of a literary work
Dynamic
A changing character
Episodes
Acts or scenes of a drama
Hamartia
An error or transgression
Hubris
Extreme pride, leading to overconfidence (usually a tragic flaw)
Skene
In staging, the "stage house"
Impartial omniscience
Point of view employed when an omniscient narrator, who presents the thoughts and actions of characters, does not judge them or comment on them.
Irony of Fate/Cosmic Irony
Suggests that some malicious fate is deliberately frustrating human efforts
Dramatic Irony
When the speaker does not realize the ironic dimension of his words
Historical fiction
When the story is set in a time and place in history
Fable
A brief, often humorous narrative told to illustrate a moral. The characters in fables are traditionally animals whose personality traits symbolize human traits.
Parable
A brief, usually allegorical narrative that teaches a moral. In parables, unlike fables, the moral themes are implicit and can often be interpreted in several ways
Burlesque
A broadly humorous parody or travesty of another play or kind of play
Farce
A broadly humorous play whose action is usually fast-moving and improbable
Flat Character
A character that has only one outstanding trait or feature, or at most a few distinguishing marks. They tend to stay the same throughout the story.
Round character
A character that presents more the reader with more facets, and they change throughout the story.
Innocent (naive) narrator
A character who fails to understand all the implications of the story he or she tells. The innocent narrator-- often a child or childlike adult-- is frequently used by an author to generate irony, sympathy, or pity by creating a gap between what the narrator perceives and what the reader knows.
High Comedy
A comic genre evoking thoughtful laughter from an audience in response to the play's depiction of the folly, pretense, and hypocrisy of human behavior
Low Comedy
A comic style arousing laughter through jokes, slapstick antics, slight gags, boisterous clowning, and vulgar humor
Observer
A first-person narrator who is relatively detached from or plays only a minor role in the events described.
Static character
A fixed character
Tragic Flaw
A flaw leading to the hero's downfall
Romantic Comedy
A form of comic drama in which the plot focuses on one or more pairs of young lovers who overcome difficulties to achieve a happy ending (usually marriage)
Satiric Comedy
A genre using derisive humor to ridicule human weakness and folly or attack political injustices and incompetence. Satiric comedy often focuses on ridiculing overly serious characters who resist the festive mood of comedy
Tragic Hero
A hero having a tragic flaw
Tall tale
A humorous short narrative that provides a wildly exaggerated version of events. Originally an oral form, the tall tale usually assumes that its audience knows the narrator is distorting the events. The form is often associated with American frontier.
Slapstick Comedy
A kind of face. Featuring pratfalls, pie-throwing, fisticuffs, and other violent action, it takes its name from a circus clown's prop--a bat with two boards that loudly clap together when one clown swats another
Comedy
A literary work aimed at amusing an audience. In traditional comedy, the protagonist often faces obstacles and complications that threaten disaster but are overturned at the last moment to produce a happy ending
Epiphany
A moment of profound insight or revelation by which a character's life is greatly altered.
Initiation story
A narrative in which the main character, usually a child, undergoes an important experience that prepares him or her for adulthood.
Nonparticipant (third-person) narrator
A narrator who does not appear in the story as a character but is usually capable of revealing the thoughts or motives of one or more character.
Omniscient (all knowing) narrator
A narrator who has the ability to move freely through the consciousness of any character. The omniscient narrator also has complete knowledge of all the external events in a story.
Participant (first person) narrator
A narrator who is a participant in the action. Such a narrator refers to himself or herself as "I" and may be a major or minor character in the story.
Unreliable narrator
A narrator who--intentionally or unintentionally--relates events in a subjective or distorted manner. The author usually provides some indication early on in such stories that the narrator is not to be completely trusted.
Tragedy
A play that portrays a serious conflict between human beings and some superior, overwhelming force. It ends sorrowfully and disastrously, an outcome that seems inevitable.
Prologue
A preparatory scene in drama
Short story
A prose narrative too brief to be published in a separate volume--as novellas and novels frequently are. The short story is usually a focused narrative that presents one or two characters involved in a single compelling action.
Antihero
A protagonist conspicuously lacking in one or more of the usual attributes of a traditional hero. An ordinary, unglorious citizen of the modern world.
Hero
A protagonist containing attributes of bravery, skill, idealism, and sense of purpose.
Comedy of Manners
A realistic form of high comic drama. It deals with the social relations and romantic intrigues of sophisticated upper-class men and women, whose verbal fencing and witty repartee produce the principal comic effects
Allusion
A reference to some famous person, place, or thing
Flashback
A scene relived in a character's memory
Tale
A short narrative without a complex plot. Tales are an ancient form of narrative found in folklore, and traditional tales often contain supernatural elements. A tale differs from a short story by its tendency toward lesser-developed characters and linear plotting.
Motivation
A sufficient reason for the character to behave as he/she does
Fairy tale, folktale
A traditional form of short narrative folklore, originally transmitted orally, which features supernatural characters such as witches, giants, fairies, or animals with human personality traits. Fairy tales often feature a hero or heroine who strives to achieve some desirable fate-- such as marrying royalty or finding great wealth.
Stream of consciousness
A type of modern narration that uses various literary devices, especially interior monologue, in an attempt to duplicate the subjective and associative nature of human consciousness.
Regional writer
A writer who usually sets stories (or their works) in one geographic area.
Reversal/Peripety
An action that turns out to have the opposite effect from the one its doer had intended
Interior monologue
An extended presentation of a character's thoughts in a narrative. Usually written in the present tense and printed without quotation marks, an interior monologue reads as if the character were speaking aloud to himself or herself, for the reader to overhear.
Character
An imagined person who inhabits a story
Foreshadowing
An indication of events to come in a narrative. The author may introduce specific words, images, or actions in order to suggest significant later events.
Odes
Danced choral songs separating the episodes in drama
Recognition
Discovery; the revelation of some fact not known before
Naturalism
Fiction of grim realism, in which the writer observes human characters like a scientist observing ants, seeing them as the products and victims of environment and heredity.
Cothurni
High, thick-soled elevator shoes that made them appear taller than ordinary men
Conclusion
In plotting, the logical end or outcome of a unified plot, shortly following the climax. Also called resolution or dénouement, as in resolving--or untying the knots created by--plot complications earlier in the narrative.
Orchestra
In staging, a level circular "dancing space"
Editorial omniscience
Point of view employed when an omniscient narrator goes beyond reporting the thoughts of his characters to make a critical judgment or commentary, making explicit the barrator's own thoughts or attitudes.
Total omniscience
Point of view in which the narrator knows everything about all of the characters and events in a story. A narrator with total omniscience can move freely from one character to another. (Written in third person)
Limited (selective) omniscience
Point of view in which the narrator sees into the minds of some but not all of the characters. Most typically, limited omniscience sees through the eyes of one major or minor character.
Objective point of view
Point of view in which the third-person narrator merely reports dialogue and action with little or no interpretation or access to the characters' minds.
Conflice
The central struggle between two or more forces in a story.
Diction
The choice of words in a story
Atmosphere
The dominant mood or feeling that pervades all parts of a literary work.
Purgation/Katharsis
The feeling the reader/viewer has after reading the story (usually one of satisfaction)
Time
The hour, year, or century of a story
Style
The individual traits or characteristics of a piece of writing
Complication
The introduction of a significant development in the central conflict between characters. Complications may be internal or external.
Écodos
The last scene in drama
Protagonist
The main or central character in a narrative. The protagonist usually initiates the main action of the story.
Climax
The moment of greatest intensity in a story, which almost inevitably occurs towards the end of the work.
Antagonist
The most significant character or force that opposes the protagonist in a narrative.
Exposition
The opening portion of a narrative. In the exposition, the scene is set, the protagonist is introduced, and the author discloses any other background information necessary for the reader to understand the events as follow
Place
The physical environment of the story
Setting
The place, time, weather, and atmosphere of a story
Crisis
The point in a narrative when the crucial action, decision, or realization must take place.
Párodos
The song for the entrance of the chorus in drama
Weather
The weather of the story
Theme
Whatever general idea or insight the entire story reveals
Tone
Whatever leads us to infer the author's attitude. Implies feelings of the author, so far as we can sense them
Sarcasm
When irony is found in a somewhat sour statement tinged with mockery
Verbal Irony
When the reader understands the speaker's meaning to be far from the usual meaning of the words
Ironic Point of View
When we sense a sharp distinction between the narrator of a story and the author
Minimalists
Writers of realistic fiction who give an unemotional tone and give nothing but facts and detail