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So you’re writing a literary analysis, huh?

So you’re writing a literary analysis, huh?. What is a literary analysis?. You can write about theme, characters, plot, point of view, symbolism, foreshadowing, and more. It is not a book report. It requires a minimum of 4 quotes from the novel and 1 citation from an outside source.

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So you’re writing a literary analysis, huh?

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  1. So you’re writing a literary analysis, huh?

  2. What is a literary analysis? • You can write about theme, characters, plot, point of view, symbolism, foreshadowing, and more. • It is not a book report. • It requires a minimum of 4 quotes from the novel and 1 citation from an outside source.

  3. How to analyze a text • 1st step – Read novel! • 2nd step – figure out what you will analyze • 3rd step – Reread passages of your novel

  4. What can I analyze? • One thing you can look at is theme!

  5. Looking at theme • The idea or point of a story. • You can write your essay explaining what the theme of the novel is. • Some common themes are…

  6. themes in Fahrenheit 451 • Censorship • Ignorance vs. knowledge • Life vs. death • Technology conflict with nature • Society vs. individual • Plus more…

  7. What if theme is not your thing? What about characters!

  8. Characters – what to look at? • Protagonist – major character at the center of the story • Antagonist – a character or force that opposes the protagonist

  9. Characters • Minor– often provide support and illuminate the protagonist • Sometimes a minor character has a major impact on the plot

  10. Characters • Characterization – the means by which writers reveal character • There are many ways an author reveal character’s personalities or traits.

  11. Characters • Explicit – narrator gives facts and comments in a very clear manner. For example, “Jimmy was very angry at his father.”

  12. Characters • Implied– narrator gives description, reader judges • For example – “Jimmy threw open the door and stormed into the room, glaring at his father.”

  13. Characters – what to look for • Connections between characters • What function does each character serve? • Foils

  14. What if you’re not into characters? Plot - that's what's happening!

  15. Plot • Causality – one event occurs because of another event • What are the triggers? • What leads to major events occurring?

  16. Plot • Conflict – struggle between opposing forces – may be internal or external

  17. Plot • Foreshadowing – a suggestion of what is going to happen • Think about all the examples from Of Mice and Men

  18. Plot • Suspense – a sense of worry established by the author • Scary movies create suspense because you know something bad will happen at any moment, just not when. • Fahrenheit keeps mentioning the fighter planes flying overhead.

  19. Point of view • Narrator – the person telling the story 1st person? 3rd person? How different is our story since it was told in 1st person? What if Mildred told the story?

  20. Not characters? • What do you do if you don’t want to analyze characters???????

  21. Irony • Verbal – we understand the opposite of what the speaker says • Example – “war is kind” from Stephen Crane poem

  22. Irony • Situational – when a character or reader expects one thing to happen, but the opposite occurs • Example – In Chekhov’s “The Bear” – a woman is happy when her husband dies

  23. Irony • Dramatic – the reader knows more than the characters • Example – Romeo & Juliet or Titanic – we know the characters fate, but they don’t

  24. Symbolism • Many stories have elements that are symbolic • “Raven” – represents death • “Mockingbird” – a wonderful creature that should not be harmed

  25. Allusions • I think you should be able to find a few. You can focus your essay on one type. • Ex – look at just literary or biblical or historic allusions

  26. Language use • You could analyze use of simile, metaphor or imagery. • There are lots of these to choose from in Fahrenheit 451

  27. All of these and more could be analyzed in your essay.

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