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Literary terms Of Mice and Men

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Page 1: Literary terms - english11.buchananschools.comenglish11.buchananschools.com/uploads/8/7/0/4/8704176/literary_te… · Example: Rabbits represent Lennie’s naïve dreams of owning

Literary terms Of Mice and Men

Page 2: Literary terms - english11.buchananschools.comenglish11.buchananschools.com/uploads/8/7/0/4/8704176/literary_te… · Example: Rabbits represent Lennie’s naïve dreams of owning

• Preliminary Of Mice and Men Literary Terms (all page number references are from the 1993 Penguin Books edition):

Page 3: Literary terms - english11.buchananschools.comenglish11.buchananschools.com/uploads/8/7/0/4/8704176/literary_te… · Example: Rabbits represent Lennie’s naïve dreams of owning

Personification

• Giving human traits (qualities, feelings, action, or characteristics) to non-living objects (things, colors, qualities, or ideas).

• Animate the inanimate

• General Example: The wind danced into the room.

• Of Mice and Men Example: “The shade climbed up the hills toward the top” (Steinbeck 2).

Page 4: Literary terms - english11.buchananschools.comenglish11.buchananschools.com/uploads/8/7/0/4/8704176/literary_te… · Example: Rabbits represent Lennie’s naïve dreams of owning

Juxtaposition

• act or an instance of placing two or more things side by side.

• General Example: Judy went to the mall with her friends who loved to frequent the clothing shops. Judy much preferred the bookstores.

• Of Mice and Men Example: At first, the description of the Salinas River Valley, where George and Lennie sleep before going to the ranch, seems idyllic and Eden-like. “The water is warm too, for it has slipped twinkling over the yellow sands in the sunlight before reaching the narrow pond” (Steinbeck 1).

Page 5: Literary terms - english11.buchananschools.comenglish11.buchananschools.com/uploads/8/7/0/4/8704176/literary_te… · Example: Rabbits represent Lennie’s naïve dreams of owning

Juxtaposition

• Soon, the area seems a more ominous place as George instructs Lennie to hide here if he gets into any trouble.

• “Lennie—if you jus’ happen to get in trouble like you always done before, I want you to come right here an’ hide in the brush” (Steinbeck 15).

Page 6: Literary terms - english11.buchananschools.comenglish11.buchananschools.com/uploads/8/7/0/4/8704176/literary_te… · Example: Rabbits represent Lennie’s naïve dreams of owning

Symbolism

• Something that represents something else by association, resemblance, or convention, especially a material object used to represent something else.

• General Example: The American flag

• Of Mice and Men Example: Rabbits represent Lennie’s naïve dreams of owning land in the Great Depression of the 1930s.

• Lennie constantly talks about raising rabbits on the ranch he and George hope to own. “An’ have rabbits. Go on, George! Tell about what we’re gonna have in the garden and about the rabbits in the cages…” (Steinbeck 14).

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Foreshadowing

• When the author provides hints of what may happen later in the story.

• General Example: In a play, the main character in the first act might show the audience he has a pistol by placing it in his pocket. Later, in the third act, he is attacked and is able to defend himself with the pistol.

• Of Mice and Men Example: When Lennie reveals he has a dead mouse in his pocket, George questions him. “Uh-uh. Jus’ a dead mouse, George. I didn’t kill it. Honest! I found it. I found it dead” (Steinbeck 5). This foreshadows the death of Lennie’s puppy and the death of Curley’s wife.

Page 8: Literary terms - english11.buchananschools.comenglish11.buchananschools.com/uploads/8/7/0/4/8704176/literary_te… · Example: Rabbits represent Lennie’s naïve dreams of owning

Simile

• A comparison of generally unlike objects using “like” or “as.”

• General Example: His fingers were like tree branches.

• Of Mice and Men Example: “On the sand banks the rabbits sat as quietly as little gray, sculptured stones” (Steinbeck 2).

Page 9: Literary terms - english11.buchananschools.comenglish11.buchananschools.com/uploads/8/7/0/4/8704176/literary_te… · Example: Rabbits represent Lennie’s naïve dreams of owning

Metaphor

• A direct comparison of generally unlike objects NOT using “like” or as.”

• General Example: His fingers are the tree branches that scraped the side of the house.

• Of Mice and Men Example: “Lennie dabbled his big paw in the water…” (Steinbeck 3).

Page 10: Literary terms - english11.buchananschools.comenglish11.buchananschools.com/uploads/8/7/0/4/8704176/literary_te… · Example: Rabbits represent Lennie’s naïve dreams of owning

Conflict

• —A problem or unresolved issue in a story.

• General Example: Judy wants to finish her homework, but her friend wants her to go to the mall. Judy is confused about what to do.

• Of Mice and Men Example: George tells Lennie, “God a ‘mighty, if I was alone I could live so easy. I could get a job an’ work, an’ no trouble... you do bad things and I got to get you out” (Steinbeck 11). Lennie replies, “George, you want that I should go away and leave you alone?’ ” (Steinbeck 12).

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Climax

• —A turning point in the story.

• General Example: Judy goes to the mall, without doing her homework, and runs into her English teacher who asks about her work.

• Of Mice and Men Example: One of the first major turning points is when George and Lennie arrive late to the ranch; the ranch boss is mad at them and is suspicious of George when he talks for Lennie (Steinbeck 21-23).

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Resolution

• The solution to conflicts presented in a story.

• General Example: Judy, being smart and time efficient, is able to do both her homework and go to the mall.

• Of Mice and Men Example: George solves his conflict with the ranch boss by explaining (falsely) that he talks for Lennie, because Lennie was kicked in the head by a horse when he was a kid (Steinbeck 22).

Page 13: Literary terms - english11.buchananschools.comenglish11.buchananschools.com/uploads/8/7/0/4/8704176/literary_te… · Example: Rabbits represent Lennie’s naïve dreams of owning

Alliteration

• —A string of words beginning with the same consonant.

• General Example: Susie sold seashells by the seashore.

• Of Mice and Men Example: “On the sand banks, the rabbits sat as quietly as little gray, sculptured stones” (Steinbeck 2).

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Imagery

• —The use of vivid or figurative language to represent objects, actions, or ideas.

• General Example: Judy, dressed in blue jeans, a blue tee-shirt with the logo “Love rules,” and orange Converse high top tennis shoes with mismatched red and blue shoelaces, entered the mall. She felt as if she was the Queen of the Mall.

• Of Mice and Men Example: “Evening of a hot day started the little wind to moving among the leaves. The shade climbed up the hills toward the top. On the sand banks the rabbits sat as quietly as little gray, sculptured stones” (Steinbeck 2).

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Style

• —A manner of expression: how a character or writer says what he/she says.

• General Example: Judy, when confronted by mall police for suspected theft, said, “You don’t know me. I ain’t no thief!”

• Of Mice and Men Example: When George confronts Lennie about misplacing his work ticket, Lennie replies, “ ‘Oh, sure, George. I remember that now. His hands went quickly into his side coat pockets. He said gently, ‘George . . . I ain’t got mine. I musta lost it.’ He looked down at the ground in despair” (Steinbeck 5).

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Tone

• —The writer's attitude toward the material and/or readers. Tone may be playful, formal, intimate, angry, serious, ironic, outraged, baffled, tender, serene, depressed, etc.

• General Example: Judy, nervous and sweating bullets, felt the world closing in on her as the cop questioned her

• Of Mice and Men Example: “Lennie avoided the bait. He had sensed his advantage. ‘If you don’t want me, you only jus’ got to say so , and I’ll go off in those hills right there—right up in those hills and live by myself’ ” (Steinbeck 13).

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Motif

• —A repeating theme or event.

• General Example: Judy tells the story (to anyone who will listen) about her encounter with the mall police almost daily.

• Of Mice and Men Example: Throughout the novel, Lennie constantly talks about raising rabbits on the ranch he and George hope to own. “An’ have rabbits. Go on, George! Tell about what we’re gonna have in the garden and about the rabbits in the cages…” (Steinbeck 14).

Page 18: Literary terms - english11.buchananschools.comenglish11.buchananschools.com/uploads/8/7/0/4/8704176/literary_te… · Example: Rabbits represent Lennie’s naïve dreams of owning

Mood

• —The atmosphere that pervades a literary work with the intention of evoking a certain emotion or feeling from the readers.

• General Example: Judy felt nervous as the mall police continued to question her. Around her, everything suddenly became fuzzy and dream-like. She felt helpless, alone, and experienced a disturbing sense of floating.

• Of Mice and Men Example: Upon meeting Curley, George and Lennie are clearly tense. “Curley lashed his body around. ‘By Christ, he’s [Lennie] gotta talk when he’s spoken to. What the hell are you getting’ into it for?’

• ‘We travel together,’ said George coldly.

• ‘Oh, so it’s that way.’

• George was tense, and motionless. ‘Yeah, it’s that way.’

• Lennie was looking helplessly to George for instructions” (Steinbeck 25).

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Theme

• —The moral or message of a story.

• General Example: Judy now realizes that false accusations occur, and she decides to forgive the mall police.

• Of Mice and Men Example: A major theme in the novel is Friendship. Even though Lennie and George have their conflicts, they remain the closest of friends. And, of course, George exacts the ultimate act of friendship at the end of the novel.

• George says to Lennie, “ ‘Because I got you an’—

• ‘An’ I got you. We got each other, that’s what, that gives a hoot in hell about us,’ Lennie cried in triumph” (Steinbeck 104).

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Protagonist

• —A main character or “hero” of a story.

• General Example: Judy realized after her “false arrest” that not everyone is bad; she remained an honest and law-abiding person.

• Of Mice and Men Example: George and Lennie are most likely the main protagonists, as they both try to do the best they can under often difficult circumstances.

• George says to Lennie, “Because I got you an’—

• ‘An’ I got you. We got each other, that’s what, that gives a hoot in hell about us,’ Lennie cried in triumph” (Steinbeck 104).

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Antagonist

• —Usually the character who opposes the protagonist.

• General Example: The mall police officer who questioned Judy was unfair and assumptive.

• Of Mice and Men Example: Curley is clearly the antagonist, as he immediately takes a disliking to Lennie and George.

• “He [Curley] glanced coldly at George and then at Lennie. His arms gradually bent at the elbows and his hands closed into fists” (Steinbeck 25).

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Magical realism

• —A narrative technique that blurs the distinction between fantasy and reality.

• General Example: After being freed, Judy saw herself rising into the air and landing upon a cloud of relief.

• Of Mice and Men Example: “Aunt Clara was gone, and from out of Lennie’s head there came a gigantic rabbit. It sat on its haunches in front of him, and it waggled its ears and crinkled its nose at him. And it spoke in Lennie’s voice too” (Steinbeck 101-102).

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Now What?

• As you present Socratic seminar, look for these literary devices in your section.

• You will find using them makes reading more engaging.