literaty analysis essay PLEASE READ
Writing the Literary Analysis
Demystifying the process.
*
An analysis explains what a work of literature means, and how it means it.
How is a literary analysis
an argument?
- When writing a literary analysis, you will focus on specific attribute(s) of the text(s).
- When discussing these attributes, you will want to make sure that you are making a specific, arguable point (thesis) about these attributes.
- You will defend this point with reasons and evidence drawn from the text. (Much like a lawyer!)
*
How to Analyze a Story
- Essential Elements of the Story
- Structure of the Story
- Rhetorical Elements
- Meaning of the Story
How to Analyze a Story
- Meaning of the Story (Interpretation)
- Identify the theme(s) and how the author announces it.
- Explain how the story elements contribute to the theme.
- Identify contextual elements (allusions, symbols, other devices) that point beyond the story to the author’s life/experience, history or to other writings.
How to Analyze a Story
- Essential Elements of the Story
- Theme: main idea—what the work adds up to
- Plot: Relationship and patterns of events
- Characters: people the author creates
- Including the narrator of a story or the speaker of a poem
- Setting: when and where the action happens
- Point of View: perspective or attitude of the narrator or speaker
Theme
- Main idea or underlying meaning of the literary work.
- What the author wants the reader to understand about the subject
- In fables, this may also be the moral of the story
Sequence of
Conflict/Crisis/Resolution
- All stories, literary essays, biographies, and plays have a beginning, a middle, and an end.
- Typically, the beginning is used to describe the conflict/problem faced by the character/subject.
- The middle is used to describe the climax or crisis reached by the character/subject.
- The end is used to resolve the conflict/problem and establish a theme.
Climax (conflict and tension reach a peak, and characters realize their mistake, etc.)
Exposition (characters, setting, and conflict are introduced.)
Rising Action
(conflict and suspense build through a series of events).
Falling Action (conflict gets worked out and tensions lessen.)
Resolution (conflict is resolved and themes are established.)
| What Are The Major Events In The First Part Of The Narrative That Describe The Problem/Conflict? | What Are The Major Events In The Middle Part Of The Narrative That Describe The Crisis/Climax? | What Are The Major Events In The Last Part Of The Narrative That Describe The Resolution/ Solution To The Problem/Conflict? |
Types of Conflict
- person vs. person conflict
- events typically focus on differences in values, experiences, and attitudes.
- person vs. society conflict
- the person is fighting an event, an issue, a philosophy, or a cultural reality that is unfair,
- person vs. nature conflict
- the character is often alone dealing with nature in extreme circumstances.
- person vs. fate/supernatural conflict
- the text is characterized by a person contending with an omnipresent issue or idea.
- person vs. self conflict
- the person is conflicted with childhood memories, unpleasant experiences, or issues with stress and decision-making.
Characterization
- Protagonist
Main character
- Antagonist
Character or force that opposes the main character
- Foil
Character that provides a contrast to the protagonist
- Round
Three-dimensional personality
- Flat
Only one or two striking qualities—all bad or all good
- Dynamic
Grows and progress to a higher level of understanding
- Static
Remains unchanged throughout the story
Character
How He/She
Acts/Feels
How Others Feel
About Him/Her
What He/She
Looks Like
What
He/She Says
| What The Character Says Or Does, A Quote From The Character, A Detail About The Character, An Event From The Story, Or A Comment About The Character By Someone Else | What I Conclude About The Character Based On This Information (Focus On BIG, Abstract Ideas, Not Concrete, Factual Information) |
- A character’s actions
- A character’s choices
- A character’s speech patterns
- A character’s thoughts and feelings
- A character’s comments
- A character’s physical appearance and name
- Other characters’ thoughts and feelings about the character
- Other characters’ actions toward the character
Characterization
Setting
- Time period
- Geographical location
- Historical and cultural context
- Social
- Political
- Spiritual
- Instrumental in establishing mood
- May symbolize the emotional state of characters
- Impact on characters’ motivations and options
| Historical Time Periods | Concepts Developed/ Revealed In This Time | Events/Examples/Details That Support The Concepts/Ideas |
Point of View
- First Person
- Narrator is a character within the story—reveals own thoughts and feelings but not those of others
- Third Person
- Objective: narrator outside the story acts as a reporter—cannot tell what characters are thinking
- Limited: narrator outside the story but can see into the mind of one of the characters
- Omniscient: narrator is all-knowing outsider who can enter the mind of more than one character.
How to Analyze a Story
Rhetorical Elements: Identify the author’s use and explain their importance
- Foreshadowing
- Use of hints or clues to suggest event that will occur later in the story
- Builds suspense—means of making the narrative more believable
- Tone
- Author’s attitude—stated or implied—toward the subject
- Revealed through word choice and details
Rhetorical Elements
- Mood
- Climate of feeling in a literary work
- Choice of setting, objects, details, images, words
- Symbolism
- Person, place, object which stand for larger and more abstract ideas
- American flag = freedom
- Dove = peace
Rhetorical Elements
- Irony: contrast between what is expected or what appears to be and what actually is
- Verbal Irony—contrast between what is said and what is actually meant
- Irony of Situation—an event that is the opposite of what is expected or intended
- Dramatic Irony—Audience or reader knows more than the characters know
Rhetorical Elements
- Figurative Language: language that goes beyond the literal meaning of words
- Simile
- Metaphor
- Alliteration
- Personification
- Onomatopoeia
- Hyperbole
Introduction
- A literary analysis is a paper that gives a deep and illuminating explanation of a literary work--it is a Critical Interpretation.
- We will learn how to formulate a deep thesis, organize a paper coherently, and use a number of different critical methods
Creating a Thesis
- The thesis should state the basic point you want to communicate, oftentimes including your main elements of support
- It should be clear and understandable
- It should be deep, something that not everyone would think of
- It should be significant, something that the majority of people interested in your text would find helpful
- It should be new and original
Creating a Thesis
- Start by reading the text closely
- Craft a statement that summarizes your thoughts about the text and responds to the ideas of other critics—a working thesis
- Modify your working thesis as you continue to interact with your research and the text
Creating a Thesis
- Don’t be afraid to modify your thesis even after you’ve begun writing the body of your paper—it’s better to change it than to have a bad one
- Spend the body of your paper arguing that your thesis provides an interpretation which is clearly supported by the text.
- Do not deviate from discussion related to your thesis
How do I support a
thesis statement?
- Examples from the text
- Direct quotations
- Summaries of scenes/action
- Paraphrases
- Other critics’ opinions
- Historical and social context
*
Tips for Writing the Body
- Begin by finding common threads among the items supporting your thesis—oftentimes, writing an outline helps this process along
- Begin writing with the body, making sure that each paragraph centers on one specific idea
- Make sure that the topic sentence of each paragraph demonstrates a link between the content of the paragraph and your thesis statement
Conclusion
- Remember to strive for depth and significance
- Remember to center your paper on your thesis
- Remember to organize your paragraphs around a central theme (your thesis)
Go hit a home run!