Elements of Lit
Elements of Lit
Plot
Definition- sequence of events or
incidents that make up a story
A.
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Plot Map
Plot
In your table group, pick a movie you
have seen and determine what
events fit into each part of the plot
map.
On a piece of scratch paper, draw a
picture of the plot map and label it
with the events from the movie you
have chosen.
Character
Definition= the people, animals, etc.
who play a role in the story
Characters
Pick two of the characters from the
movie you discussed. Are they round
or flat? Dynamic or static? How do
you know?
Theme
Definition- A thought or idea the
author presents to the reader. It must
be extracted from different parts of
the work. Authors use characters,
plot, and other literary devices to
convey theme.
Theme
Subject vs. Theme
Subject- the topic or one of the topics of the
story
examples: tradition, family, love
Theme- what the author is saying about a topic.
It is the generalization about life either stated
or implied by the story.
example: The people you love can become
your family, even if you are not related.
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Mood
Definition- the feeling or emotion
that the story creates in the
reader
Created by:
A. Setting- the time and place in which
the story is taking place, including
factors such as weather, social
customs, etc.
B. Imagery- language that helps you
imagine the scene; descriptions of
Mood
These images are both of the same
castle (from Beauty and the Beast).
What is the mood of each and how is
the mood created?
Point of View
Definition- the way the story is
told
Whose eyes do we see the
story from?
Point of View
A. Omniscient- the author tells the story using the
third person (not a character in the story). Author
knows all of what is done, said, felt, and thought
by the characters.
Whose eyes? The authors all knowing eyes
B. Limited Omniscient- author tells the story from
the third person, but limits observations of
thoughts and feelings to one character; the author
presents the story from this characters eyes
Whose eyes? The authors eyes, but s/he only
knows about one characters thoughts
Point of View
C. First Person- one character tells the story in
the first person. The reader sees and knows
only as much as the narrator
Whose eyes? A character in the storys eyes
D. Objective- the author is like a movie camera
that moves around freely recording objects or
characters. The author offers no comments on
the characters or their actions. Readers are not
told the thoughts or feelings of the characters.
Whose eyes? A movie camera
Movie Poster
Determine a metaphor for the
different elements of literature and
create a poster representing that
metaphor.
Your poster needs to include all five
elements of literature words and an
image that represents that elements.
Your poster also needs to include a 23 sentence explanation of your
metaphor.