Perhaps nowhere is the moral-instructive aspect of ancient storytelling better illustrated than in the fables of Aesop, a Greek who probably wrote in the sixth century BCE, and in the parables of Jesus as told in the Gospels of the New Testament (see Chapter 7).
a story told by Jesus to convey his religious message
Perhaps nowhere is the moral-instructive aspect of ancient storytelling better illustrated than in the fables of Aesop, a Greek who probably wrote in the sixth century BCE, and in the parables of Jesus as told in the Gospels of the New Testament (see Chapter 7).
a medieval narrative about the adventures of a chivalric hero
The first true works of fiction in Europe, however, were less concerned with society or politics than adventure. These were the lengthy Spanish and French romances of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
In English the word novel was borrowed from French and Italian to describe these works and to distinguish them from medieval and classical romances as something that was new (the meaning of novel). In England the word story was used along with novel in reference to the new literary form.
artistic movement that represents the world accurately
Fiction, along with drama, has a basis in realism or verisimilitude. That is, the situations or characters, although they are the invention of writers, are similar to those that many human beings experience, know, or think.
the appearance of truth; the quality of seeming to be true
Fiction, along with drama, has a basis in realism or verisimilitude. That is, the situations or characters, although they are the invention of writers, are similar to those that many human beings experience, know, or think.
an imaginary person represented in a work of fiction
Stories, like plays, are about characters, who are not real people but who are nevertheless like real people. A character may be defined as a reasonable representation of a human being, with all the good and bad traits of being human.
an undivided or unbroken completeness with nothing wanting
In a well-done story, all the actions or incidents, speeches, thoughts, and observations are linked together to make up an entirety, sometimes called an organic unity.
an important question that is in dispute and must be settled
An issue (which today has become a broad and perhaps overused word) may involve a work's characters in direct or indirect argument or opposition, and it may also bring out vitally important moments of decision about matters of private or public concern.
One of the most important ways in which writers knit their stories together, and also an important way in which they try to interest and engage readers, is through the careful control of point of view—the voice of the story, the speaker who does the narrating.
The third-person point of view may be (1) limited, with the focus being on one particular character and what he or she does, says, hears, thinks, and otherwise experiences...
The third-person point of view may be (2) omniscient, with the possibility that the activities and thoughts of all the characters are open and fully known by the speaker...
The third-person point of view may be (3) dramatic, or objective, in which the story is confined only to the reporting of actions and speeches, with no commentary and no revelation of the thoughts of any of the characters unless the characters themselves express their thoughts dramatically.
belonging to immediate experience of actual things or events
The third-person point of view may be (3) dramatic, or objective, in which the story is confined only to the reporting of actions and speeches, with no commentary and no revelation of the thoughts of any of the characters unless the characters themselves express their thoughts dramatically.
Together with narration, an essential aspect of fiction is description—those words that cause readers to imagine or re-create the scenes and actions of a story.
a figure of speech that suggests a non-literal similarity
Mood and atmosphere are important aspects of descriptive writing, and to the degree that descriptions are thought provoking, they may reach the level of metaphor and symbolism.
the practice of investing things with arbitrary meaning
Mood and atmosphere are important aspects of descriptive writing, and to the degree that descriptions are thought provoking, they may reach the level of metaphor and symbolism.
the lines spoken by characters in drama or fiction
Another major tool of the writer of fiction is dialogue. By definition, dialogue is the conversation of two people, but more than two characters may also participate.
a contrast between the intended and literal meanings
Word choice is the characteristic of verbal irony, in which what is meant is usually the opposite of what is said, as when we mean that people are doing badly even though we say that they are doing well.
incongruity between what happens and what was expected
Situational irony refers to circumstances in which bad things happen to good people, or in which rewards are not earned because forces beyond human comprehension seem to be in total control, making the world seem arbitrary and often absurd.
when the audience understands something the characters don't
In dramatic irony characters have only a nonexistent, partial, incorrect, or misguided understanding of what is happening to them, while both readers and other characters understand the situation more fully.