Essay Topic Hub

Literature
Essays

8,793+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

8,793 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
What is Literature?

 

Even people who love reading can find the idea of a literary analysis to be challenging. This is unfortunate, because the whole goal of a literary analysis is for the reader to consider how and why a work was written. What message was the author trying to convey? Why did he or she want to convey that message? However, because there are quite a few elements expected in a literary analysis, many students find themselves overwhelmed by those expectations. While our library of study guides, which break down some of the world’s most famous works of literature by some of the world’s best authors, can be a tremendous help for students-in-need, we also want to make sure you understand all of the steps of a literature analysis.

The first step in a literature analysis is to understand the characters and the role that they play in the novel. Characterization is clear in some works of literature. For example, Shakespeare’s play Othello features Iago, who may be one of the most straightforward examples of a villain in all of literature. Other works of literature may be more challenging. While Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl became the modern standard for the unreliable narrator, the classics are actually full of equally unreliable narrators or characters. When a character’s true motivations and actions are not revealed until the end of a work, or possibly remain ambiguous even at the conclusion of the work, then characterization can be more of a challenge. It can help to break the analysis down into steps. Who is the protagonist? Many people mistakenly believe that the protagonist has to be a “good guy,” but it is more accurate to think of the protagonist as the main character. Who is the antagonist? What roles do they play in the book? How do they interact with the other characters? What tools has the author used to help bring the character to life? What does the character look like? What kind of language does the character use? How do the author’s choices impact how you feel about the character?

The second step in a literature analysis is to understand the plot. The plot is the storyline of the work. Many students find it difficult to condense a large work down and create a concise description of the plot, because they either want to include all of the little details that enhance the story or because they eliminate critical plot points in a desire to keep their plot overview concise. Most, but not all, plots follow a rising action up until the story’s main conflict, a crisis, and then a falling action as the story concludes. A description of the plot should contain all of the elements necessary to understand this rising and falling action.

In addition to plot and characterization, some other elements can be critical to understanding a story. Exposition and foreshadowing can provide critical information for the reader, not only letting them know about the background of the characters, but also providing a glimpse of what the characters will do later in the story. Another important concept is allegory; many great works of literature have survived the test of time because they talk about a larger lesson or meaning in life. The imagery that the author uses to create a vivid image is also critical; many works are as famous for their imagery as they are for their plots or characters. [ Show Less ]

8,793 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Corporate social responsibility, ethics, and gender diversity in higher education governance
In this paper, we are going to be discussing the impact of social responsibility on firms. This will be accomplished by focusing on five different articles with an emphasis on: explaining the theory, studying the method, discussing the results and analyzing various conclusions. Together, these elements will highlight the different strategies that are being utilized by corporations.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Words and meanings in language and communication
In central Australia, where the rivers Murray and Darling meet, there lives a small group of aborigines who were forced to change their word for water nine times in five years, each time because the man had died whose…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Emily Dickinson's poetry and literary significance
Emily Dickinson is viewed by many historians as the greatest female poet of American history, yet a true understanding of how she came to be both profound and articulate has been hard to come by.
Research Paper Undergraduate
African-American History the Sharecropping System
The Sharecropping system was a labor agreement that was shaped by the situation in the South after the Civil War and by the mutual dependency between farmers and laborers. (the Sharecropping System) the Civil War of…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Religion in the news
Religion is a highly complex concept and the debates on religious matters are far from being exhaustive. To most of us, religion is a refuge, the hope for a better life or the payer for a second chance.
Paper Undergraduate
William Faulkner and John Steinbeck,
¶ … William Faulkner and John Steinbeck, Ernest Hemingway was a member of what Gertrude Stein termed "the lost generation" -- disillusioned, young men returning from World War I. Pulled out of a 1900s United States…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Historiography on Four Works Written
¶ … historiography on four works written by four different authors. Each of these works depicts a time and place in the history of American slavery, and each makes unique and valid points regarding this "peculiar"…
Paper Undergraduate
The Ripple Effects of American
The United States and the United Kingdom are today great partners on a divided world stage. Ironically, we may argue that this is a relationship which in its worst straits would help to plant the seeds for a…
Paper Undergraduate
Mixing Methods Within Research Projects?
¶ … MIXING METHODS WITHIN RESEARCH PROJECTS?
Paper Undergraduate
Ethnics of Surrealism Edwards, Brent
Edwards, Brent Hayes. The Ethnics of Surrealism. Transition, No. 78, 84-135