Q and R Lists Literary Devices Flashcards Preview

English Literature > Q and R Lists Literary Devices > Flashcards

Flashcards in Q and R Lists Literary Devices Deck (19)
Loading flashcards...
1
Q

a four line stanza in a poem, the first four lines and the second four lines in a Petrarchan sonnet; a Shakespearean sonnet contains three of these followed by a couplet

A

quatrain

2
Q

describing a literary technique, the goal of which is to render work that feels true, immediate, natural, and realistic

A

Realism

3
Q

drama that attempts, in content and in presentation to preserve the illusion of actual, everyday life

A

realistic drama

4
Q

a repeated word, phrase, line, or group of lines, normally at some fixed position in a poem, written in stanzaic form

A

refrain

5
Q

the sorting out or unraveling of a plot at the end of a play, novel, or story

A

resolution

6
Q

the point at which the action of the plot turns in an unexpected direction for the protagonist

A

reversal

7
Q

aka caesura; a natural pause, unmarked by punctuation, introduced into the reading of a line by its phrasing or syntax

A

rhetorical pause

8
Q

poetry using artificially eloquent language, that is, language too high-flown for its occasion and unfaithful to the full complexity of human experience

A

rhetorical poetry

9
Q

a question asked for stylistic effect and emphasis to make a point rather than to solicit an answer

A

rhetorical question

10
Q

the matching of final vowel or consonant sounds in two or more importantly positioned words

A

rhyme

11
Q

any fixed pattern of rhymes characterizing a whole poem or its stanzas

A

rhyme scheme

12
Q

the recurrence of accent or stress in lines of verse

A

rhythm

13
Q

the events, marked by increasing tension and conflict, that build up to a story’s climax

A

rising action

14
Q

poetic meters such as iambic and anapestic that move or ascend from an unstressed to a stressed syllable

A

rising meter

15
Q

a novel in which real persons or actual events figure under disguise (FR: novel w/ a key); novel that has the extraliterary interest of portraying identifiable people more or less thinly disguised as fictional characters

A

roman a clef

16
Q

a type of comedy whose likable and sensible main characters are placed in difficulties from which they are rescued at the end of the play. either attaining their ends or having their good fortunes restored

A

romantic comedy

17
Q

in literature, a late 18th to early 19th century movement that emphasized beauty for beauty’s sake, the natural world, emotion, imagination, the value of a nation’s past and its folklore, and the heroic roles of the individual and the artist

A

Romanticism

18
Q

a character whose distinguished moral qualities or personal traits are complex and many-sided

A

round character

19
Q

a line which has no natural speech pause at its end, allowing the sentence to flow uninterruptedly into the succeeding line

A

run-on line