Literary Techniques (1 Viewer)

mazs

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Does anyone have a list of literary techniques for short stories and novels to add to the analysis of related texts for belonging?
Poetry and Film are quite easy but finding books a bit more difficult.
Any help appreciated ;)
 

student6625

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I think some good ones would be:

-imagery (visual, kinesthetic, olfactory, gustatory, tactile)- e.g. vivid description of the landscape comments on one's attitude towards belonging. (are you studying Romulus My Father?)
-symbolism
-personification
-metaphor + simile
-allegory
-juxtaposition (if you're ever in doubt, always use this one since it's apparent in every text)
-dialogue
-internal monologue
-positive/negative diction (connotations)
-irony
-repetition
-recurring motif
-first/second/third person narration
-hyperbole
-intertexuality
-tone (although this is a bit vague)
-allusion (biblical, historical etc)



The following ones are some which I think are kind of 'cheap' and should avoid being used unless you have to i.e. only use it when you can't find any 'better' techniques

-alliteration + assonance
-onomatopoeia
-punctuation e.g. exclamation marks
-colloquial language
-accumulation

plus any other ones which are not sophisticated enough

BTW, does anybody know what 'anaphora' means? I saw someone mention it as a technique in a practice essay.
 

SanjoyM

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Anaphora - Repetition at the beginning of successive sentences or clauses:)
 

Annum

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Just wanted to ask a question, is there a specific literary name for short sentences, or do we just refer to it as short sentences when writing essays?
Thanks :)
 

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