II. Tragic or Dramatic Irony

Similar documents
Where the word irony comes from

Metaphors. Metaphor Simile Tenor & Vehicle Extended Metaphor Mixed Metaphor

It is an artistic form in which individual or human vices, abuses, or shortcomings are criticized using certain characteristics or methods.

5. Aside a dramatic device in which a character makes a short speech intended for the audience but not heard by the other characters on stage

Intro to Satire. By J. Clark

A figure of speech is a change from the ordinary manner of expression, using words in other than their literal sense to enhance the way a thought

Rhetorical Analysis Terms and Definitions Term Definition Example allegory

Style (How to Speak) February 19, Ross Arnold, Winter 2015 Lakeside institute of Theology

Imagery Metaphor Simile Personification Hyperbole Idioms. Figurative Language

Literary Elements & Terms. Some of the basics that every good story must have

Slide 1. Northern Pictures and Cool Australia

Glossary alliteration allusion analogy anaphora anecdote annotation antecedent antimetabole antithesis aphorism appositive archaic diction argument

Glossary of Literary Terms

1. alliteration (M) the repetition of a consonant sound at the beginning of nearby words

PROLOGUE. ACT 1 SCENE 1 1. How does Shakespeare start the play so that he gains the attention of the groundlings?

Top Figures of Speech

Written by Rebecca Stark Educational Books n Bingo

CHAPTER II REVIEW OF LITERATURE. This chapter, the writer focuses on theories that used in analysis the data.

Vocabulary Workstation

Literary Element. Cards

Allusion brief, often direct reference to a person, place, event, work of art, literature, or music which the author assumes the reader will recognize

Next Generation Literary Text Glossary

Literary Terms Review. AP Literature

Adjust oral language to audience and appropriately apply the rules of standard English

Musical Rhetorical Devices: An Overview

Romeo and Juliet Reading Questions

Allegory. Convention. Soliloquy. Parody. Tone. A work that functions on a symbolic level

GLOSSARY OF TECHNIQUES USED TO CREATE MEANING

Introduction to Satire

AP English Language and Composition Summer Assignment: Analysis

15. PRECIS WRITING AND SUMMARIZING

Conflict. Conflict is the struggle between opposing forces in a story or play. There are two types of conflict that exist in literature.

Curriculum Map-- Kings School District (English 12AP)

Figurative Language. Bingo

POETRY TERMS / DEFINITIONS

Alliteration. repetition of initial sounds. example: Peter Piper picked a pail of pickled peppers. Sally happily serenaded the sandy seashore.

It is used by authors (satirists) to expose and criticise an element of society by using humour, irony, exaggeration or ridicule.

English Language Arts 1-2 Honors Summer Reading Packet Due Thurs., Aug. 9, 2018

Literary Elements Allusion*

DOWNLOAD OR READ : TECHNIQUES OF IRONY IN ANATOLE FRANCE PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

English IV Standard Summer Reading The Five People You Meet in Heaven by Mitch Albom Directions: This assignment is due the first week of school in

AP ENGLISH IV: SUMMER WORK

Literary Devices Journal

Novel Study Literary Devices, Elements, Techniques, and Terms

Short Story and Literature Notes. English 9 Mrs. DiSalvo

1. Allusion: making a reference to literature, art, history, or pop culture

Elements of Poetry and Drama

Romeo and Juliet By William Shakespeare. 1 st Prologue 1. The prologue is a, a popular form of verse when the play was written in 1595.

2016 Summer Assignment: Honors English 10

ELEMENTS OF PLOT/STORY MAP

Word Log. Word I don t know: Page: What I think it means: Word I don t know: Page: What I think it means: Word I don t know: Page:

Protagonist*: The main character in the story. The protagonist is usually, but not always, a good guy.

Irony as Cognitive Deviation

AP Language and Composition Summer Assignment, 2018

Literary Vocabulary. Literary terms you need to know!

Poetry. Student Name. Sophomore English. Teacher s Name. Current Date

The character who struggles or fights against the protagonist. The perspective from which the story was told in.

Literary Terms. A character is a person or an animal that takes part in the action of a literary work.

STYLISTIC AND RHETORICAL FEATURES

Samuel Langhorne Clemens aka Mark Twain. Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

UNSEEN POETRY. Secondary 3 Literature 2016

We ve reached the end!!!

Summer Reading Material: Sleeping Freshmen Never Lie by David Lunbar *STUDENTS MUST BUY THE BOOK FOR SUMMER READING. ELECTRONIC FORMAT IS ACCEPTABLE.

Types of Literature. Short Story Notes. TERM Definition Example Way to remember A literary type or

Lit Terms. Take notes as we review each of these terms and examples.

RCD 1. FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE (LITERARY DEVICES) WHAT IS? Definition/Example. Essential Question: How do writers use figurative language in their

The character who struggles or fights against the protagonist. The perspective from which the story was told in.

character rather than his/her position on a issue- a personal attack

Please follow Adler s recommended method of annotating. ************************************************************************************

Fairfield Public Schools English Curriculum

Honors English 9: Literary Elements

English I Pre-AP Summer Reading Mrs. Alano

a story or visual image with a second distinct meaning partially hidden behind it literal or visible meaning Allegory

questions SUITCASE LADY

Definition / Explination reference to a statement, a place or person or events from: literature, history, religion, mythology, politics, sports

Textual Features: Language Features

Romeo and Juliet. English 1 Packet. Name. Period

Literary Terms. I. Literary Device: Any literary device or technique used to achieve a specific effect.

AP LANGUAGE & COMPOSITION SUMMER ASSIGNMENT

Literary Terms. We will be using these literary terms throughout the semester. You WILL be tested on these literary terms, so pay attention!!

Poetic Devices and Terms to Know

Eagle s Landing Christian Academy Literature (Reading Literary and Reading Informational) Curriculum Standards (2015)

2011 Tennessee Section VI Adoption - Literature

ABSTRACT Refers to language that describes concepts rather than concrete images. ALLITERATION Repetition of the initial consonant sound.

English 11: November 10, 2016

Literary Devices: Terms & Examples. 9 th Grade ELA

Guide. Standard 8 - Literature Grade Level Expectations GLE Read and comprehend a variety of works from various forms of literature.

Glossary of Literary Terms: 7 th /8 th Grade

IB Analysis and Fundamentals of Composition Guide

7. Terms, Verse Forms and Literary Devices

ANIMAL FARM NOTES. English 4 CP Smith

Reading Assessment Vocabulary Grades 6-HS

AP English Literature 12 Summer Reading

Language, Typography and Meaning. Connotation and Resonance in Type

Processing Skills Connections English Language Arts - Social Studies

Resources Vocabulary. oral readings from literary and informational texts. barriers to listening and generate methods to overcome them

The Second Coming: Intensive Poetry Study. Monday, July 20, 2015

ENGLISH Home Language

Glossary of Literary Terms

allusion appendix assonance cause characterization characterize chronological classified ad connotation consonance arranged in order of time

Transcription:

Satire A literary work that ridicules its subject through the use of techniques such as exaggeration, reversal, incongruity, and/or parody in order to make a comment or criticism about it, often to incite change.

What is irony? Irony: the use of words to express something different from and often opposite to their literal meaning; an expression or utterance marked by a deliberate contrast between apparent and intended meaning.

I. Verbal Irony Verbal irony is the use of words to convey something other than, and especially the opposite of the literal meaning of the words, to emphasize, to aggrandize, or to make light of a circumstance or subject: A man stares out a window looking at a miserably muddy rainy day and remarks, Lovely day for a stroll. This remark is ironic because it expresses the opposite of the circumstances.

II. Tragic or Dramatic Irony Tragic irony or dramatic irony heightens the suspense in a given situation. In this form of irony the words and actions of the characters, unbeknownst to them, betray the real situation, which the spectators fully realize. An example is in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet when Romeo commits suicide after he believes Juliet to be dead. Readers or audience members know more than the characters.

III. Situational Irony Situational irony occurs in literature and in drama when persons and events come together in improbable situations, creating a tension between expected and real results: A man and woman are sitting at a bus stop, and the woman divulges some of her deepest darkest secrets. The man listens and advises her, and the woman thanks him and gets on her bus.

III. continued After she is gone the man takes off his heavy coat to reveal that he is wearing the garb of a priest. The irony lies in the fact that the woman never knew that the man she was talking to was a priest, but the audience does, and the reality of what the audience knows about why the man was so helpful and understanding is different from the reality the woman experienced.

IV. Understatement A form of irony in which something is intentionally represented as less than it is: Hank Aaron was a pretty good ball player.

V. Hyperbole A figure of speech in which exceptional exaggeration is deliberately used for emphasis rather than deception: I am so tired that I feel dead.

VI. Paronomasia A form of punning or playing with words using the same word or similar-sounding words: Your children need your presence more than your presents (Jesse Jackson).

VII. Similes and Metaphors Give an example of a simile using the word tree. Give an example of a metaphor using the word basketball.

VII. Oxymoron A rhetorical figure in which incongruous or contradictory terms are combined: authentic reproduction boneless ribs inside out liquid gas no comment Can you think of others?

To enlarge, increase, or represent something beyond normal bounds so that it becomes ridiculous and its faults can be seen. Exaggeration

Incongruity To present things that are out of place or are absurd in relation to its surroundings.

New Starbucks Opens In Rest Room Of Existing Starbucks CAMBRIDGE, MA Starbucks, the nation's largest coffee-shop chain, continued its rapid expansion Tuesday, opening its newest location in the men's room of an existing Starbucks. "Eventually, Starbucks rest rooms everywhere will sell coffee," Schultz said. "But that ambitious scheme is at least five years down the road. In the meantime, we plan to open an additional location in this Starbucks' ladies' room within months, and are already drafting plans for a fourth restaurant along the corridor leading from the main seating area to the rest rooms. At some point a 'Star-bucks Express' window will eventually open in the walk-in closet of the men's room Starbucks."

To present the opposite of the normal order (e.g., the order of events, hierarchical order- often used with gender roles). Reversal

Reversal (cont) 1. Reversal can focus on the the order of events, such as serving dessert before the main dish or having breakfast for dinner. 2.Reversal can focus on hierarchical order for instance, when a young child makes all the decisions for a family or when an administrative assistant dictates what the company president decides and does.

Parody To imitate the techniques and/or style of some person, place, or thing. Video