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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 ]

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Conceptualization of Operation in Literary
¶ … conceptualization of operation in literary works: Gender and social class stratification according to Voltaire, Jane Austen, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Henrik Ibsen, Zora Neale Hurston, Chinua Achebe and Franz Kafka
Paper Masters
The nature and definition of tragedy
As a form of literature, the tragedy has been in existence since the time of the Ancient Greeks. Two tragic stories, separated by 2400 years, are Oedipus the King and Death of a Salesman; and while each tells the story of a suffering character, each is also a reflection of the society in which it was written. In ancient Greece the subjects of tragedies were larger than life characters who experienced outrageous hardships, but in the modern world, the audience has a connection with the tragic characters and the tragic events are often more relative to the audience's personal experience.
Paper Masters
High speed railway development in England
In this paper, we are looking at the benefits and drawbacks associated with implementing high speed rail service in England. This is accomplished by conducting a literature review of the different viewpoints on the project. Once this takes place, is when we can see the short and long term challenges with the project.
Paper Doctorate
Buffalo Soldiers in the American West
Buffalo Soldiers were part of the cavalry that served the U.S.A. between 1866 and 1951. They served in the military just like all the other enlisted American soldiers by that time but sadly little is said about them and…
Paper Undergraduate
Milton Paradise Lost Quotation Response
This passage from Paradise Lost illustrates the heavy misogyny of literature and religious belief tat the time Milton was writing. Eve defers to Adam in all things, as is natural; as Eve herself, says, "to know no more…
Paper Undergraduate
Bringing a Major League Baseball
¶ … Bringing a Major League Baseball Team to an Area
Paper Doctorate
Alan Ginsberg's life and literary contributions
Allen Ginsberg was born to Louise and Naomi Ginsburg on June 3, 1926 in Newark, New Jersey. His father Louise was a poet, a high school teacher, and a restrained Jewish Socialite. His mother Naomi Levy was Communist and…
Paper Undergraduate
Expanding Diversity Consciousness
Diversity can be viewed in many ways and it can be experienced in both outer and inner phenomena. We find that diversity of people is present in our dreams, feelings, states, religions, thoughts, ethnicities, ages, political views, sexual orientations and physical abilities. A life can become more sustainable and richer through these differences. We all know that there is not one kind of vegetable, person or point of view. In simple words diversity can be defined as a welcoming attitude and an integration of diverse people and elements. This research paper is based on learning, identifying and evaluating diversity practices in any place. I want to explore how the environment and places help people to create and compare their intended purposes.
Paper Doctorate
German Expressionism versus Surrealism
Contrasting views of the urban landscape in visual arts and film
Essay Doctorate
Historical context and significance of Egyptian mythology in global history
This paper is about the Egyptian Methodology. The religion of ancient Egypt did not have any authentic religious book such as the Bible or the Quran. The relationships between different gods and deities were not developed in a single moment in time, instead they kept on changing with the passage of time. The priests and the scholars in the ancient Egypt did not compile the Egyptian mythology in one appropriate document like the Greek mythology. There are only a few relevant well documented forms of mythology that comes from different Egyptian languages and regions.