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Writing Strategies/Literary Terms

Horizontales
When the audience knows information that the characters don’t.
Conversation between two or more characters
Humor that provides a release of tension and breaks up a serious episode.
When something unexpected or just the opposite of what is expected happens.
A brief narrative (story) of an entertaining and presumably true incident—often used to begin an essay or illustrate an idea.
A series of three ideas
An overused, unoriginal expression
Category or type of writing--poetry, drama, novel, science fiction, romance, etc.
Language not meant literally; metaphors and personification are examples of this
Extreme exaggeration for effect.
The author’s appeal to logic through facts, statistics, and voices of authority.
An author’s appeal to the reader’s emotions--especially pity, compassion, and sympathy.
When an abstract idea is represented by something concrete, such as Mama's plant in "A Raisin in the Sun"
The perspective from which a story is told
A list of items in categories
Giving a non-living or non-moving thing human or animal qualities, characteristics, or abilities
Verticales
The author's attitude, usually conveyed by word choices
A struggle or problem in a story that must be resolved
Vivid description that helps the readers see, hear, smell, taste, or touch
The method by which an author creates the appearance and personality of imaginary persons and reveals their character.
Language that is not poetry
The repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of sentences, often used to build emotional effect or emphasis.
Main or central idea in a work of literature
A clue or hint about the future outcome or event in a story.
The pairing of opposites
Reference to something the reader might recognize, such as a famous person, a TV show, a fictional character, historical event, etc.
The author's credibility or ethics
A repeated idea in a work of fiction that has a symbolic significance, such as MLK's speeches or the white house/ice cream factory in "The Nickel Boys"
A shift backward in time to reveal an earlier scene of some importance.
A type of figurative language in which two unlike things are compared in order to suggest a resemblance