Jerz: EL150 (Intro to Literary Study)


12 Feb 2007

Hamilton, Essential Literary Terms (112-149)

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Found: Vocabulary
Excerpt: "A round, or three-dimensional, character, in contrast, is multifaceted and subject to change and growth"Hamilton, Essential Literary Terms (112-149) -- Jerz: EL150 (Intro to Literary Study)...
Weblog: MacKenzieHarbison
Tracked: February 8, 2007 1:53 PM
Is this a mistake?
Excerpt: Hamilton, Essential Literary Terms (112-149) -- Jerz: EL150 (Intro to Literary Study) "Probably the most influential practitioner of stream of consciousness is James Joyce, who used it extensively in his innovative novel Ulysses (1922)."...
Weblog: MatthewHenderson
Tracked: February 9, 2007 3:25 PM
How intrusive!
Excerpt: Hamilton, Essential Literary Terms (112-149) -- Jerz: EL150 (Intro to Literary Study)...
Weblog: CheraPupi
Tracked: February 10, 2007 1:59 PM
Greater Detail
Excerpt: Narration refers to the act of telling a story, whether in prose or in verse, and the means by which that telling is accomplished. Hamilton, Essential Literary Terms (112-149) -- Jerz: EL150 (Intro to Literary Study)...
Weblog: JenniferPrex
Tracked: February 10, 2007 9:45 PM
First Person? Third?
Excerpt: Hamilton, Essential Literary Terms (112-149) -- Jerz: EL150 (Intro to Literary Study) "...Mantailored with selfcovered buttons. She didn't like it because I sprained my ankle first day she wore choir picnic at the Sugarloaf..." Page 119 Joyce's Ulysses...
Weblog: HallieGeary
Tracked: February 10, 2007 10:29 PM
Dialogue - Both Useful and Necessary
Excerpt: Hamilton, Essential Literary Terms (112-149) -- Jerz: EL150 (Intro to Literary Study) "Dialogue has several possible uses: to reveal character' motives, feelings, values, and relationships; to advance the plot; and to suggest tone" (132). I think for t...
Weblog: LorinSchumacher
Tracked: February 11, 2007 9:28 AM
Repartee in Gilmore Girls
Excerpt: Hamilton, Essential Literary Terms (112-149) -- Jerz: EL150 (Intro to Literary Study) A technique for creating lively dialogue, common to both drama and prose fiction, is repartee. Most of the words in this book are familiar to me, but I...
Weblog: JennaMiller
Tracked: February 11, 2007 6:01 PM
Understanding a theatrical speech!
Excerpt: Hamilton, Essential Literary Terms (112-149) -- Jerz: EL150 (Intro to Literary Study) An aside is a speech, usually brief, that, according to theatrical conventions, is heard only by the audience, or, sometimes, is addressed privately to another charac...
Weblog: DerekTickle
Tracked: February 11, 2007 6:21 PM
More examples of the Bard.
Excerpt: Hamilton, Essential Literary Terms (112-149) -- Jerz: EL150 (Intro to Literary Study)...
Weblog: KaylaCappadocia
Tracked: February 11, 2007 7:43 PM
Survival: Weakest Link
Excerpt: Hamilton, Essential Literary Terms (112-149) -- Jerz: EL150 (Intro to Literary Study)...
Weblog: CorinneLauer
Tracked: February 11, 2007 7:47 PM
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/CorinneLauer/2007/02/hamilton_essential_literary_te.html
Excerpt: Hamilton, Essential Literary Terms (112-149) -- Jerz: EL150 (Intro to Literary Study)...
Weblog: CorinneLauer
Tracked: February 11, 2007 7:54 PM
Show & Tell
Excerpt: Hamilton, Essential Literary Terms (112-149) -- Jerz: EL150 (Intro to Literary Study) When I read Dr. Jerz review of my paper he commented that ccertain sentence was showing rather then telling , and I had no real clue as to...
Weblog: JaraWhite
Tracked: February 11, 2007 8:24 PM
Putting Names on Familiar Dialogue
Excerpt: Hamilton, Essential Literary Terms (112-149) -- Jerz: EL150 (Intro to Literary Study) "An aside is a speech, usually brief, that according to theatrical conventions, is heard only by the audience, or, sometimes, is addressed privately to another charac...
Weblog: BethanyMerryman
Tracked: February 11, 2007 8:34 PM
Becoming more familiar....
Excerpt: Hamilton, Essential Literary Terms (112-149) -- Jerz: EL150 (Intro to Literary Study) The third-person point of view, in contrast, presents a Narrator that has a much broader view and, usually, an objevtive perspective on characters and events. I actua...
Weblog: MargaretJones
Tracked: February 11, 2007 9:24 PM
The Essence of Flatness
Excerpt: This is not to imply that characters must be round to be effective. Their relative level of development depends on their role in the action and on the conventions of the genre in which they appear. Sharon Hamilton Essential Literary...
Weblog: A Storybook of Quotes
Tracked: February 12, 2007 12:48 PM
Wang Chung
Excerpt: Hamilton, Essential Literary Terms (112-149) -- Jerz: EL150 (Intro to Literary Study) "In depicting characters, authors use methods of either showing or telling."...
Weblog: CoreyStruss
Tracked: February 15, 2007 6:01 PM
Antagonists Can Be Good Guys?
Excerpt: Hamilton, Essential Literary Terms (112-149) -- Jerz: EL150 (Intro to Literary Study) "If the protagonist is himself evil however, like Shakespeare's Macbeth, the antagonist-in Macbeth, Macduff serves that function-is portayed as a sympathetic characte...
Weblog: BethanyBouchard
Tracked: February 15, 2007 8:23 PM
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