INTRODUCTION TO LITERATURE
INTRODUCTION TO LITERATURE
THE THEORY OF LITERATURE
Meaning of Literature
T
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here is no
single definition that suits the meaning of literature. As a result there have been various attempts to define the term literature. Some of these
attempts are;
Literature is the work of
art that uses the language creatively to portray the message to the intended
audience.
Literature is a work
of art that uses the
language creatively to express human realities to the society.
Literature is an imaginative work
of art that uses language to reflect social realities.
Why is literature said
to be an art?
a. Language
use.
The language of literature is different from the language of
everyday use (normal language). Literature uses figures of speech and words are
assigned an extra meaning than what they ordinarily imply. Some words carry
literal meaning and others have symbolic meaning. It is therefore advised not
to take words for granted in literature. You need to dig a bit deeper before
you settle and say this is what it means.
b. Characters
and characterisation.
Literature uses real people or other
characters that represent real people in the outside world. Inanimate beings
may be personified in a way that they represent human qualities and act
accordingly. This adds artistic effect to the literary work. (more
details are given in subsequent chapters)
c. Choice
and presentation of incidents.
Literature is not just a collection
of facts and stories to be reported. Incidents in literature are presented in
artistic way that makes the audience think that they are actually happening.
There is the use of skilful narrative technique like point of view, flashbacks,
foreshadowing, suspense, etc all these help the readers to visualise the events
as though they are just unfolding before their eyes. (more details are
given in subsequent chapters)
Why is literature said
to reflect social realities?
Social realities are
the things that human beings experience in their daily lives. It is not
mandatory that all the incidents discussed in one literary work should be found
in one society all the time. Some issues become relevant and exist across time
and space and later become obsolete. So the themes that were once relevant in
one society may be irrelevant in the same society as time passes by.
Likewise, the
themes that are relevant in one part of the world may be irrelevant at another
part of the world. However, there are issues like corruption, classes, humiliation,
betrayal, FGM, HIV/AIDS, conflicts, position of women in the society,
oppression, exploitation, identity and awareness, effects of European culture
on African culture, etc which are common in African literature.
TYPES OF LITERATURE
There are two major
types of literature namely oral and written literature.
ORAL LITERATURE
This is a type of literature that presents the message
through words of mouth. This is the oldest type of literature since it was practised
before the invention of writings. Its forms include; Folk tale, tall tale,
legends, myths, fables, anecdote, ballads, epics, riddles, sayings (proverbs
and idioms). Let us discuss some of them in details.
Anecdote –is a brief
story about an interesting, amusing or strange event. Writers tell anecdote or
include them in a larger work, to entertain the readers or to make a point.
Epic –is a long narrative
poem, about the adventures of a hero, whose actions reflect the ideals and
values of a nation or a group. Epics address universal concerns such as good
and evil, life and death, and other serious subjects. One of the famous
epics in African literature is “The Epic of Sundiata”
Fable- is a brief story or
poem usually with animal characters that teaches a lesson or a moral about
life. Or is a very brief story in prose or verse that teaches a moral, or a
practical lesson about how to get along in life. The moral is usually stated at
the end of the fable. E.g. what goes around comes around’ or ‘do unto others
what you would have them do unto you.’
Folk tale – is a story
composed orally and then passed from person to person by word of mouth. Or it
is a simple story that has been passed down from generation to generation by
word of mouth. Folk tales are usually about ordinary people, animals, or
occurrences in nature and are usually set in time long past. They originated
from people who could neither read nor write. These people entertained one
another by telling stories aloud – often dealing with heroes, adventure, magic,
or romance. E.g. “why monkeys live in Trees”
Legend – is a widely
told story about the past – one that may or may not have a foundation in fact.
Or is a story that is handled down from the past and may tell about something
that really happened, or someone who really lived. Legends usually mix facts
and fictions. Every culture has its own legends that mean its familiar
traditional stories.
Myths – is a fictional
tale that explains the actions of gods, or heroes, or the cause of natural phenomena
(i.e. the origin of elements of nature). Or it is a traditional story about the
origins or workings of the world. Some myths explain how certain things came
into being; others explain elements of nature or social customs.
Myths that
explain the origin of earthly life are known as origin myths. They
are composed orally and then passed from generation to generation through word
of mouth. Because myths have been handled down from generation to generation
for a long time their original authors are usually unknown. The characters in
myths are usually supernatural beings. Every ancient culture has its own
mythology.
Parables - a short story
that teaches a moral or spiritual lesson, especially one of those told by Jesus
as recorded in the Bible. E.g. the ‘Prodigal son’, ‘the sower’, ‘The Rich man
and Lazarus’ etc.
Ballad – is a song-like
narrative poem that tells a story, often one dealing with adventure and
romance. Most ballads are written in four – six – line stanzas and have regular
rhythms and rhyme scheme. A ballad often features a refrain – a regularly
repeated line or group of lines at the end of each stanza as in “A freedom
Song by M. O Macgoye”. Originally ballads were not
written down.
They were composed orally and then sung. As these early folk
ballads passed from singer to singer they often changed dramatically. Even
today modern ballads do not necessarily have four – six – line stanzas and regular
rhythms and rhyme scheme. As in The Ballad of the Landlord by Lungston
Hughes. A person who sings or writes ballads is called a balladeer
Tall tale -this is an exaggerated
far-fetched story that is obviously untrue but is told as though it should be
believed.Most tall tells are humorous. As tales are passed on, they
often get taller and taller – more and more exaggerated.
WRITTEN LITERATURE.
This is a type of
literature that presents the message through/ in written form. This began with
the invention of writings. This has two major forms. Fiction and
non-fiction
FICTION AND
NON-FICTION
NON-FICTION LITERATURE.
This is a kind of
literature that deals with factual materials or events. The people written
about in non-fictions are real. Literary non fictions are written to be read
just the same way as fictions. These include;
Autobiography. This is an account
of someone’s life and experiences written by himself/herself. The person may
choose to tell about an important event from his/her life or tell the whole
life story up to the time when it is written. Forms of autobiography are;
personal narratives, journals, memoirs, diaries, letters etc. Autobiographies
are almost always written in the first person I. Example; “Gifted Hands” by Ben
Carson and “The Narrative of Frederick Douglas: An American Slave. Written by
himself.
\ Biography. This is a story of
someone’s life and experiences written by another person. In biographies the
author may choose to interview the biographical subject and also gather information
from other sources. The subjects of Biographies are often famous people. E.g.
Lincoln: A Photo biography. A biographer is one who
writes, composes or produces a biography.
Essay. This is a short
piece of writing in which the writer shares his/her point of view about a
certain subject. Or is a short work of non-fiction that usually deals with a
single subject. Essays can be classified as formal and informal, personal or
impersonal. A formal essay is highly organised, thoroughly researched, and serious
in tone. An informal essay is lighter in tone and usually reflects the writer’s
feelings and personality.
Informational articles. These are articles
that present factual materials about a specific subject. They appear in
newspapers, magazines, and in reference books like Encyclopaedias, almanacs,
and atlases.
FORMS OF NON-FICTION
Nonfiction is broken
down into four kinds of writing.
Exposition.
This is a writing that explains something or gives information about a topic.
Persuasion
or argumentation. This is a writing that attempts to convince you of
something by showing you that the statement is true or false.
Description. Is
a writing that helps you to form a clear mental picture of something. Writers
use specific details such as shapes, tastes, sounds and textures to help you
form the picture.
Narration. A
writing that tells a story of an event or series of events.
ORGANISATION OF
NON-FICTION
There are three parts
to most nonfiction writing.
i. Introduction. It
tells you the main ideas of what the piece is about. It may also give
background material or state a problem.
ii.The
body. It develops the main idea through the details that support the main
idea.
iii.Conclusion.
It shows that the work is ended. The conclusion may restate or summarize the
author’s main ideas, it may answer the question raised in the work or it may
urge the reader to future actions.
FICTION
It is a kind of
literature that deals with non factual materials or events. Characters, setting
and events are the product of imaginations from the author. It can be inspired
by the actual events or completely made up.
GENRES OF FICTION LITERATURE
PROSE FICTION
A prose is any kind of
writing that is not poetry or that is not presented in verse form or stanza. It
is a specifically imaginative work that includes short stories, novella and
novels.
SHORT STORY
This is a story
usually about imaginative characters and events that is short enough to be read
from the beginning to the end without stopping. It is also a brief work of
fiction that can generally be read in one sitting. It usually focuses on one or
two main characters that face a single problem or conflict. E.g. The voter
by C. Achebe, Ajaiyi and the Witchdoctor by A. Tutuola, Mabala the Farmer by R.
Mabala. Etc.
ELEMENTS OF A SHORT
STORY
There are four basic
elements of a short story. These are; Setting, plot, characters and theme.
Short stories differ from the novel in its treatment of these four elements.
The main difference is partly dictated by length. In short stories characters
are usually not fully developed and usually centre on one idea. Other minor
elements include conflict, point of view, symbolism, flashbacks, fictitious
quality etc.
NOVELLA. This is a fiction
work that is longer than a short story but shorter than a novel. It is longer
than a short story but the characters are not fully developed as in novels.
EXAMPLE. Samuel Beckett’s novella First Love. In this episode the
unnamed narrator, who spends most of the time lying prostrate on a park bench,
begins to feel his privacy threatened by the visitations of a woman to the same
bench.
NOVEL is a work of fiction
that is longer and more complex than a short story. Or it is a fictional prose
usually consisting of more than fifty thousand words. (Probst, et al,
2000). In novels, setting, plot characters and theme are fully
developed in great details. Like a short story the novel has four main
elements, setting, plot characters and theme. A person who writes novels is
called a novelist E.g. Passed like a shadow by B. Mapalala. The
Interview, by P. Ngugi, etc.
DRAMA/PLAY
Is a literary genre that
tells a story through actions and dialogue and is written to be performed on
stage by actors. Drama has the same elements as those in novels and short
stories. i.e. setting, plot characters, theme, climax, conflict, symbolism,
etc. An element that is unique to drama is DRAMATIC TECHNIQUE.
This
includes:
Dialogue. These
are the words that the characters speak in a play. It is a conversation between
characters. It is the dialogue that reveals the character’s qualities,
personality traits, and reactions to other characters.
Soliloquy/monologue.
This is a speech made by a character when he/she is alone on stage. Or it is a
speech in which a character alone on stage, expresses her thoughts and feelings
aloud for the benefit of the audience, often in a revealing way.
Aside.
This is a direct address of the audience by a character. The other characters
do not hear what is being said.
Stage
direction. These are the instructions/notes included in a play/drama which
describe how the work is to be performed or staged. They indicate areas of the
stage in which actors sit, stand, move, speak, exit, enter, and so on,
lighting, music, sound effect, costumes, emotional state, etc.
These are typed
in italics and enclosed in the parentheses or brackets.
TYPES OF DRAMA
Tragedy
It is a serious
drama/play with a sad ending especially one in which the main character dies.
The events in a tragic plot are set in motion by a decision that is often an
error in judgment. Succeeding events are linked in a cause-and-effect relationship
and lead inevitably to a disastrous conclusion, usually death. E.g. Oedipus
the King, by Sophocles. Julius Caesar by W. Shakespeare, Mfalme Juha
by F Topan etc.
A person who writes
tragedies for the theatre or an actor in a tragedy is called a tragedian. E.g. Sophocles,
Shakespeare, etc
Comedy
It is a dramatic work
that is intended to be funny, humorous and usually ends happily with a peaceful
resolution of the main conflict. To achieve a comic effect sometimes the
playwrights use Mistaken identity. Sometimes certain
characters are mistaken about their surroundings. They say or do
things that would be appropriate in a different social situation but are
inappropriate in their surroundings. The resulting confusion results to a silly
series of events. The confusion of characters causes a ridiculous conflict.
The
climax arrives when the characters learn the truth. E.g. Juliette and
Oko or Atangana and Abessolo in Three Suitors One Husband. Other examples
of comedies are The trials of Brother Jero and The Lion and the Jewel
both by W. Soyinka
An entertainer who
makes people laugh by telling jokes and funny stories is called a comedian/comedienne.
Tragic comedy
It is a dramatic work
that combines the elements of tragedy and comedy but here the hero/heroine does
not end in danger or death. A comic relief is a technique used to achieve this
effect. This is a humorous scene that is inserted into a serious work of drama
to provide relief from the seriousness felt by the audience.
Melodrama
A play that is full of
exciting events and in which the characters and emotions seem too exaggerated
to be true/real. It is accompanied with a melody –hence melody drama
(melodrama)
Historical drama
This is a type of
drama that expresses the history of a particular society but usually contains
some elements of tragedy and comedy. E.g. Dedan Kimathi by Ngugi,
Kinjeketile by E.Hussein
Other important terms
in drama.
Act.
This is a major unit/part of action in a drama or play.
Scene.
This is a smaller section or a subdivision of one act. So a scene is a section
presenting events that occur in one place at one time.
Costume. The
clothes worn by actors in a play or film/movie or worn by somebody to make them
look like somebody or something else. E.g. a student, a housemaid, a judge,
etc.
Prop. A
small object used by actors, during the performance of a play or in a
film/movie
Audience. Is
a group of people sitting in a room, auditorium or in the theatre listening to
and watching a performance.
Theatre. This
is a special building or an outdoor area where plays/movies/films and other
entertainments are performed.
ELEMENTS OF LITERATURE
Three are two major types of Elements of Literature
namely; Form and Content.
CONTENT
This has the following
elements:
THEME
This is a writer’s
central idea, concern, or purpose in a literary work. A theme can usually be
expressed as a generalization or a general statement about human beings or
about life. Although a theme may be directly stated in the text, it is more
often presented indirectly. When the theme is presented indirectly the reader
must figure out what the theme is by looking carefully at what the work reveals
about people or about life. Common themes in literature include classes, poverty,
unemployment, oppression, exploitation, corruption, marginalization, hypocrisy,
love, identity, betrayal, racial segregation / discrimination, effects of
colonialism / neo-colonialism, humiliation position of women in the society.
Etc
MESSAGE/MORAL
This refers to the
lesson taught by a literary work. A poem, novel, short story or play often
suggests a lesson/moral that is not directly stated. The lesson must be drawn
by the reader based on the other elements of the work. e.g.
United we
stand, divided we fall.
What goes
around comes around.
Do unto others
what you would have them do to you
Children should
be given the right to education
CONFLICT
A conflict is a
struggle between opposing forces. A conflict is one of the most
important elements of stories, novels and plays because it causes the actions.
There are two kinds of conflict:
Internal
conflict. This takes place within the mind of a character. The character
struggles to make decision, take action, or overcome a feeling. For example
THONI in “The black hermit” has this kind of conflict that later forces her to
commit suicide.
External
conflict. This is the one in which the character struggles against
some outside forces, such as another person. In this category we can get further
subdivisions of conflicts such as, economic conflict (rich vs. poor), political
conflict (leaders vs. Citizens), family conflict (among family members), social
conflict (one social group vs. Another), cultural conflicts (modernism vs.
Traditionalism) etc
RELEVANCE
This is the
applicability of a literary work in contemporary societies. We assess whether
or not the author has been successful in addressing the issues that are
relevant to our lives currently. That is why we believe that literary works do
not develop in a vacuum but they usually address issues in societies they
evolve.
It is
interesting however to note that a literary work may not necessarily be
relevant across time and across space. In one case, a literary work might be
relevant in one society but may be irrelevant in another. In another case, a
literary work that was once relevant in one society might be irrelevant in the
same society as time passes by. E.g. most literary works that were about
struggle for independence in Africa have now fallen out of favour.
FORM
This refers to the
structure of a literary work. It has the following elements.
CHARACTERS/CHARACTERIZATION
Characterization is the act of
creating and developing a character. It is the way the writer reveals the personality
of a character. A Character - Is a person or an animal that takes part in the
action of a literary work.
Authors use two major
methods of characterization; Direct and Indirect.
Direct
Characterization. When using the direct characterization a writer tells the
characters’ traits or characteristics. E.g. brave, corrupt, weak etc.
Indirect
Characterization. When using indirect characterization a writer
depends on the reader to draw conclusions /judgments about the characters’
traits by using the evidence the writer gives:
Through
the words of the character.
Through
the description of the character’s look and clothing.
Through
the description of the character’s feelings and thoughts.
Through
comments made about him by another character in the story.
Through
the characters behaviour.
CLASSIFICATION OF
CHARACTERS.
There are different
ways of classifying the characters.
Major/main character
and minor character
The main or major
character is the one that is the most important in the story, poem or play.
Usually the main character appears from the beginning to the end of the story.
E.g. Juliette. While a minor character is the one that takes part in the action
of a story but is not the focus of attention. These help the main character to
accomplish the mission.
Flat character and
round character.
Flat character is
usually one-sided and often stereotypical. These characters are not well
developed. They are introduced more to shed light on the character of the major
figure. While round character on the other hand is fully developed
with complete personality and exhibits many traits, - often both faults and
virtues. (strengths and weaknesses)
Dynamic character and
static character.
Dynamic character is
the one who changes or grows in the course of the story this one is complex and
multifaceted like a real person. E.g. Remi in “The Black Hermit”. While a
static character is the one who does not change. This one is one-dimensional.
Like Mbarga in Three Suitors One Husband.
Protagonist and
antagonist.
A protagonist is the
main character in a literary work. Often a protagonist is a person but sometimes
it can be an animal. An antagonist is a character or a force that is in
conflict with the main character or protagonist.
Foil character
This is a character
that provides a contrast to another character. A writer uses a foil to
accentuate and clarify the distinct qualities of two characters. The
word foil is also used for a thin sheet of shiny metal that is placed beneath a
gem to intensify its brilliance. A character who is a foil, like the
metal behind the gem, sets off or intensifies the qualities of another
character.
SETTING
The setting of a
literary work is the place and time of the action. Stories can be set in the
present, past or future. What happens in the story and how characters look and
act often depends on the time when the event took place. It may include the
year, time of the day, even weather. The place may be a specific country,
state, region, community, neighbourhood, building, institution, or at home.
Details such as dialects, clothing, customs, and modes of transportation are
often used to establish the setting. The setting can be real as in “Passed like
a shadow” or imaginary as in Kusadikika.
STYLE
This is the way the
writer uses the language. It is also understood as the individual way in which
a writer has used the language to express his or her ideas. Style results from
diction (word choice), sentence structure and tone. One writer may choose to
use many figures of speech another may prefer to use straightforward language
with few figures of speech.
POINT OF VIEW
We also look at the
point of view. This is the perspective or the vantage point from which the
story is told. It is either the narrator outside the story or a character
inside the story. Three commonly used points of view are first person,
omniscient third person and limited third person.
In the first-person
point of view, the narrator is a character in the story and refers to
himself or herself with the first person pronoun “I”.
In omniscient
third-person point of view, the narrator knows and tells about what
each character feels and thinks.
In limited
third-person point of view the narrator relates the inner thoughts
and feelings of only one character and everything is viewed from this
character’s perspective.
PLOT
This is a
sequence/arrangement of events in a literary work. In most novels, dramas,
short stories and narrative poems the plot involves both the characters and a
central conflict. Plot may be chronological or flashback.
A
chronological plot is one that the incidents are arranged in the order they
occur. The plot usually begins withEXPOSITION that introduces the
setting, the characters and the basic situation. This is followed by the
introduction of the central conflict. The conflict increases during the RISING
ACTION until it reaches the highest point of interest or
suspense, THE CLIMAX. The climax is followed by theFALLING
ACTION or the end of the conflict. These are events that during the
falling action make up theRESOLUTION or Denouement.
The plot can also
employ a
flashback. This is an interruption of the current action
of a plot to show events that happened at an earlier time. It breaks the normal
forward movement of a narrative. Although flashbacks often appear in the middle
of the story it can also be placed at the beginning. They give background
information the audience needs to understand in order to understand the present
action.
Foreshadowing can
also be used. This is the use of clues/hints to suggest events that will occur
later in the plot. Foreshadowing is used to build suspense or anxiety in the
reader or viewer. E.g. the character prepares his gun and hides it somewhere;
this may foretell violence later in the
story.
LANGUAGE USE/DICTION
This refers to the
writer’s or speaker’s choice of words. People use different types of words
depending on the audience they are addressing, the subject they are discussing
and the effect they are trying to produce. Diction is an essential element of a
writer’s style and has a major effect on the tone of the piece of writing.
FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE
This is writing or
speech that is not meant to be taken literally. One has to dig deeper and
uncover the underlying meaning. The many types of figurative language are known
as figures of speech.
FIGURES OF SPEECH
Definition:
Figure
of Speech is a word or group of words that describes one thing in terms of
another and is not meant to be understood as literally true.
A
figure of speech is a word or phrase that departs from everyday literal
language for the sake of comparison, emphasis, clarity, or freshness.
Also
known as, rhetorical figure, metaphorical language/ literary devices
Used well, figures
of speech greatly enhance your fiction, and can be a very economical
way of getting an image or a point across, but used incorrectly, they will
confuse the reader.
The special emphasis is typically
accomplished by the user's conscious deviation from the strict literal sense of
a word, or from the more commonly used form of word order or sentence
construction. From ancient times to the present, such figurative locutions have
been extensively employed by orators and writers to strengthen and embellish
their styles of speech and composition. A number of the more widely used
figures of speech, some of which are also called tropes, follow.
1) Metaphor is
a figure of speech that makes a direct comparison between two unlike things
without using the words “like or as”. A metaphor suggests that one thing is
another thing, or is equal to another thing. It uses a word or phrase denoting
one kind of idea or object in place of another word or phrase for the purpose
of suggesting a likeness between the two. Metaphors create vivid descriptions
with few words, as the subject of the comparison takes on the qualities of the
thing with which it is compared.
'He was a lion in the
fight'.
In the biblical Book
of Psalms, the writer speaks of God's law as
“A light to
his feet and a lamp to his path.”
“The LORD is my
shepherd”
2) A simile is a figure of
speech that makes a comparison between two unlike things and uses the words
"like," "as," "than" or "resembles".
Or Simile is specific comparison by means of the words “like”
or “as” between two kinds of ideas or objects. Similes make
descriptions vivid by comparing their subjects with known events or things.
Effective similes help readers visualize what is being described. Examples,
As cool as a
cucumber',
'As white as
snow',
'Life is just like
an ice-cream, enjoy it before it
melts',
“Christianity shone
like a beacon in the black night of paganism”
3) Irony:
It is the expression of ideas which are exactly opposite to the implied
meaning. Or Irony
is a disagreement or incongruity between what is said and what is understood,
or what is expected and what actually occurs. Irony can be used intentionally
or can happen unintentionally. Authors can use irony to make their audience
stop and think about what has just been said, or to emphasize a central idea.
The audience's role in realizing the difference between what is said and what
is normal or expected is essential to the successful use of irony.
'A student of
psychology going insane',
'A bank lends
you money provided you show that it's not needed'
Or the warning
found on every cigarette pack, 'Smoking is injurious to
health' is
an irony!
There are three scenarios
in which irony occurs.
a. Verbal
irony is when the intended meaning of the statement or work is
different (often the opposite of) what the statement or work literary says. For
Example, Ibsen’s An Enemy of the People is
ironically used since Dr. Stockman who is declared an enemy, is in really
sense, and is a friend of the people.
b. Situational
Irony occurs when what happens is contrary to what is expected; or the
actual outcome of a situation is the opposite of what is expected. For example
The son of
the English teacher fails the English Exam.
The daughter
of a rich merchant is expelled from school for lack of school fees of 20,000/=.
c. Dramatic
Irony occurs when events or facts not known to the character on stage
in a fictional work, are known to another character and the audience or reader.
E.g. Oedipus the King.
4) Personification:
It is a representation of abstract ideas or inanimate objects as having human
attributes or qualities. OrPersonification is the representation of
inanimate objects or abstract ideas as living beings. Personification connects
readers with the object that is personified. Personification can make
descriptions of non-human entities more vivid, or can help readers understand,
sympathize with, or react emotionally to non-human characters.
'Death laid its icy
hands on kings',
“Necessity is the
mother of invention
“the mountains cried,
the valleys wept, and the hills wailed all mourning the death of Nyerere.
5) Apostrophe:
It is a direct address to the dead or an inanimate object creating an emotional
surge. In Apostrophe,an actor turns from the audience, or a
writer from readers, to address a person who usually is either absent or
deceased, an inanimate object, or an abstract idea. As in John Donne’s “Death
Be Not Proud”
'Caesar,
only if you were alive'
'O stone, O
might, O heart of man-made God, Thou art the emblem
of our hope',
6) Rhetorical
question is the act of asking questions not to gain information but
just for emphasis. No answer, in fact, is expected by the speaker. The device
is illustrated in the following series of sentences:
“Did you help me
when I needed help? Did you once offer to intercede in my behalf? Did you do
anything to lessen my load?”
7) Hyperbole/overstatement is a figure of
speech in which the truth is exaggerated for emphasis or for humorous effect.
In exaggeration a person or thing is depicted as being better or worse, or
larger or smaller, than is actually the case. It is, used often to
ridicule, create humour or any drastic emotional appeal.
'The waves
rose as high as the mountains,'
'I am so
hungry that I can eat a whole cow'
'She wept and
wept until there was a sea of tears'.
8) Litotes/ understatement:
It is an understated expression when the actual idea to be expressed is quite
significant. It is like downplaying an idea when it seems to be the best
possible course of action or description. Statements such as,
'I was
not feeling unhappy”. Meaning I was feeling happy
“The English
poet Thomas Gray showed no inconsiderable powers as a prose writer, “meaning
that Gray was in fact a very good prose writer
I am not
unmindful- meaning I mind
9) Euphemism, this
is the substitution of an offensive/unpleasant term or phrase by the one that
has pleasant associations, as in the use of “lavatory” or “rest room” for “toilet,”
and “pass away” for “die.”
10) Metonymy is
a figure of speech that associates the name of one thing with that of something
else. This is a word that substitutes for an object, the name of an attribute
or concept associated to that object. The use of ‘crown’ for ‘king’ or
for the government ruled by a king is an example of a metonym.
a. “We
waited hopelessly for two sunsets”
“Sunsets” here
implies two days,
b. “He
has a good name in our society.” Or,
“They spoilt his name.” “Name”
refers to reputation
c. “A
press conference by the “Statehouse”. Here,statehouse refers
to the officials of the Statehouse who will be holding the press conference.
A metonym is not
necessarily one word. As in a hotel -“Room 44 needs a bottle
of champagne” “Room 44” here refers to the customer who is in that
room.
d. “The
hostess kept a good table,” when “good food” is implied.
11) Synecdoche:
is a figure of speech in which the whole is represented by a part or a part by
the whole is called as synecdoche. Example
'He has several mouths
to feed'. Here mouths represent people.
“50 head of cattle; “head”
is used to mean whole animals,
“The president's
administration contained the best “brains” in the country; “brains”
is used for intellectually brilliant persons.
12) Onomatopoeia, imitation
of natural sounds by words. Examples in English are the italicized words in the
phrases
“The humming bee,”
“The cackling hen,”
“The whizzing arrow,”
“The buzzing saw.”
The Hissing snake,
The Splashing water,
The Bang of a door.
13) Oxymoron: This is a figure of
speech which includes words or ideas opposite in meaning placed one after the
other. Oxymoron combines
two seemingly contradictory or incongruous words.
o 'True
lies',
o 'Open
secret',
o 'Pretty
ugly face',
o 'Feeling alone in
a crowd’,
o Living
deaths,
o Dear
wounds,
o Fair
storms,
o Silent
noise
o Freezing
fires
o Pain
for pleasure
o Clearly
confused
o Cruel
kindness
o Deafening
silence
o Only
choice
o Random
order
o Alone
together
o Awfully
good
o Dark
light
o Light
darkness
o Appear
invisible
o Goodbye
reception.
o Growing
smaller
o True
myth
o Unpopular
celebrity
o Worthless
gold
o Sad
joy
o Sweet
agony
o Daydream
in the night
14) Paradox, this is a figure
of speech which includes a statement or sentiment that
appears contradictory to common sense yet is true in fact. Simply put it is a
statement that seems to contradict itself but is, nevertheless,
true. These statements or assertions, according to logic, cannot be
true, yet the figure links them in a way that creates a new meaning, one that
defies logic but works on situation. Example of paradox is found in Martin Luther’s
speech “I Have a Dream”
“..The Negro is still
languished in the corners of American society and finds himself an
exile in his own land”
In the above sentence,
logically speaking, one cannot be in exile while he is still in his own land,
as the true meaning of the word exile is. But the situation described, is the
one that makes us see as if the Negros are in exile, since they have nothing to
enjoy in their own land.
15) Climax, It is the arrangement of
ideas in an increasing order of their importance. It emphasizes the meaning in
a clear and effective way. Or it is the arrangement of words,
clauses, or sentences in the order of their importance, the least forcible
coming first and the others rising in power until the last, as in the following
sentences:
“It is an
outrage to bind a Roman citizen; it is a crime to scourge him; it is almost
parricide to kill him; but to crucify him—what shall I say of this?”
'He came, he
saw, he conquered, 'her village, her state, her nation were her pride',
'Eat, drink and sleep'
and so on.
16) Anticlimax is
a sequence of ideas that abruptly diminish in dignity or importance at the end
of a sentence or passage, generally for satirical effect. The following
sentence contains an illustration of anticlimax:
“Among the great
achievements of Benito Mussolini's regime were the revival of a strong national
consciousness, the expansion of the Italian Empire, and the running of the
trains on time.”
17) Antithesis is a
juxtaposition of two words, phrases, clauses, or sentences contrasted or
opposed in meaning in such a way as to give emphasis to contrasting ideas. An
example of antithesis is the following line by the English poet Alexander Pope:
“To err is human, to forgive divine.” “The LORD gave and the LORD has taken
away.
18) Conceit, it
is an elaborate, extended and sometimes surprising comparison between things
that, at first sight, do not have much in common. It is also defined as an
elaborate, often extravagant metaphor or simile making an analogy between
totally dissimilar things. The term originally meant “concept” or “idea.” The
use of conceits is especially characteristic of 17th-century English
metaphysical poetry. An example occurs in the poem “A Valediction: Forbidding
Mourning,” by the English poet John Donne, in which two lovers' souls are
compared to the legs of drawing compasses.
19) Allusion is
a literary device in which the writer or speaker refers either directly or
indirectly to a famous person, event, place or thing in history, religion,
mythology, politics, sports, science or to a work of art or literature.
Allusion connects the content of a text with the larger world. Allusion calls
to mind the ideas and emotions associated with a well-known event or published
work. Those ideas and emotions then contribute to what the author conveys. As
in Martin Luther’s speech
"Four score
and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation,
conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created
equal."
20) Parallel structure
/parallelism / Parallel constructionis a repetition of the
same pattern of words or phrases within a sentence or passage to show that two
or more ideas have the same level of importance. Parallel structure helps to
organize ideas, making a text or speech easier to understand. Parallel
structure can also create a satisfying rhythm in the language an author
uses. In
this literary device, the idea to be stated is repeated in some other form to
emphasize the articulation.
'She cried, she wept but
he was unmoved',
'Show me your strength,
your stamina, your energy only where it is needed'
21) Anaphora Also called
epanaphora, the repetition of a word or expression at the beginning of
successive phrases for rhetorical or poetic effect, as in Lincoln's
"We cannot dedicate-
We cannot consecrate-
We cannot hallow this
ground"
I am a true Acoli
I am not a half-caste
I am not a slave girl
22) Imagery This
is a figure of speech which creates mental pictures that appeal to readers,
five senses. Writers use sensory details to make readers imagine how
things look, feel, smell, sound and taste. There are different types of images
depending on the five senses.
o Visual
image- this is an image of sight e.g.
Greater than
the Rift-Valley;
Camera film
to light, coils of the greatest python
Stronger than
the blows of the sea
When the hurricane is
at its height.
o Organic
image -this is an image of feeling
Dying in agony
More painful than
the yell
o Audio
image – this is an image of sound
The yell of
a woman
I plead
the cry of the nation
The screams of
a man
o Kinetic
image -this is an image of motion.
Is faster than
camera film
But as
slow as tropism
I declare running Better
than walking
o Tactile
image - this is an image of touch
As it falls on
the seemingly soft soil
Standing hard and
ready..
o Olfactory
image – this is an image of smell.
a stinking room
o Gustatory
image. This is an Image of taste
In search
of sweetness
o Thermal
image this is an image of heat.
23) Anadiplosis; the repetition in which
the last expression of one statement becomes the first expression in the
following statement. As in the poem “Africa” by David Diop
The blood of your sweat
The sweat of your work
The work of your slavery
The slavery of your children
24) Symbolism is
a literary device that uses one object to stand for something else or
to mean something else. Actions can also be symbolic, such as washing hands to
indicate non-involvement. Some symbols are universal, with generally
accepted meanings, such as a crown to mean superiority or the colour red to
mean danger. Symbols, especially specific ones, often mean more than one thing.
Sunrise symbolizes the
beginning of the struggle and sunsetsymbolizes the end of the
struggle in the poem “Sunrise”
25) Pun - It
is a humorous play on two or more meanings of the same word or on two different
words with the same sound. It is also understood as a play on the multiple
meanings of the word or on two words that sound alike but have different
meanings. It uses words that have similar or identical sounds but very
different meanings.Quite often it is used to pass a witty remark or bring
about a sarcastic effect. Examples are,
"It is better to
have loved a short person and lost, than never to have loved A TALL."
'I KNEAD the dough so
that I can eat',
Another good pun is
found in the last but one line of Shakespeare’s “When My Love Swears That She
Is Made of Truth.” He says;
‘Therefore, I LIE with
her and she with me’ Shakespeare Sonnet 138
26) Allegory is a form of
extended metaphor, in which objects,
persons, and actions in a narrative, are equated with the meanings that lie
outside the narrative itself. The underlying meaning has moral, social,
religious, or political significance, and characters are often personifications of abstract ideas
as charity, greed, or envy.
Thus an allegory is
a story with two levels of meanings, a literal meaning and a symbolic meaning. A more modern
example of allegory is George Orwell’sAnimal Farm, which on the
surface level is about a group of animals who take over their farm but on the
deeper level is an allegory of the Russian Revolution and the shortcomings of
the Communism.
27) Anastrophe:
Also known as inversion, it is a sentence or a poetic expression which reverses
or changes the order of words for greater emphasis. The following are examples
of anastrophe.
'Ten thousand saw I at a
glance' instead of “I saw ten thousand at a glance”
‘Forward they go”
which is not a normal English structure of SVA. ‘They go forward’
‘And away they go’
instead of ‘and they go away’
‘While your hive they
plunder’ instead of ‘while they plunder your hive’.
28) Satire:
is a literary technique which principally ridicules its subject which includes
individuals, organization or states often as an intended means of provoking or
preventing changes. Satire is any piece of writing that uses devices such as
irony. It is a text or performance that uses irony, derision or wit to expose
or attack human vice, foolishness or stupidity.
ROLES /FUNCTIONS OF
LITERATURE
Since literature does
not develop from a vacuum, but from the society in which it emanates, it has
got different roles to play in the society. The following are some of the most
important functions of literature in the society.
i. Literature
educates people in the society.
Literary works are used to impart
knowledge to the members of the society. It creates awareness on different
social political and economic matters taking place in their societies. It
educates the young people on how they are expected to behave in accordance with
the demands of their societies and the roles they are required to fulfill.
ii. Literature
expresses people’s culture.
Since literature develops from the society,
it automatically expresses the culture of its people. All cultural aspects like
traditions, beliefs, customs, norms etc are expressed so that the society may
cherish the good ones and carry them over to the next generations, and modify
or discard the outdated ones.
iii. Literature
is used to entertain people.
Most literary works appeal to the
emotions. By reading, listening and watching literary works, we get
entertained. Poems and dramas create an enjoyment to the audience different
from one we get when we are eating food. Literary enjoyment is called aesthetic
pleasure. E.g. comedies and melodrama.
iv. Literature
is used to influence people in the society.
More often than not people
who are interested in watching, listening and reading literary works are
tempted to act like those characters in the respective literary work. During
the struggle for independence for example literary works were used to instil
revolutionary ideas to the oppressed to take up arms against the oppressor.
Consider the poem “Your Pain” by Armando Guebuza.
v. Literature
is used to develop language.
By reading, listening and watching
literary works, people improve their language skills such as listening,
speaking, reading and writing. People may also improve their vocabulary stock
since they will not only come across a number of new words but also know how
they are used in real contexts. Authors do also come with new words, phrases,
idioms, figures of speech, that help to develop the language.
vi. Literature
is used to liberate people mentally and physically.
Literary works
present the message that helps to liberate the society mentally as a result
they liberate themselves physically. It conscitizes the society about the
existence of oppressive systems and suggest ways to get rid of those systems.
E.g. United we stand, divided we fall.
vii. Literature
is used to criticize the society.
Literature may be used
to criticise the society in a sense that it points out the burning issues and
requests the society to resolve them. More often than not literary artists
point out the evils done by the traditional society
e.g. Perpetuating the outdated customs like FGM, Widow Inheritance,
forced marriages etc. and ask the society to discard them. They may also point
the wrongs done by the ruling class and suggest the ways to get rid of these
leaders.
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