MHS Composition Guide

Literary Analysis guide

Manuscript Form
General Rules
Title Page
Outline Page
Body of Paper

Writing a Good Composition
Guidelines
Writing Conference
Grading Standards
Correcting Compositions

Literary Analysis Guide
Plot
Characters
Setting
Tone
Style
Point of View
Narrative Technique
Structure
Theme

Approaches to Literary Criticism
Biographical
Historical
Geographical
Political  
Philosophical &
Religious

Sociological/
Anthropological

Psychological


Style:
the author's use of language

Style and literary standards

  • All writers have a style, but not all styles are good.

  • Whether a style is good or bad largely depends on whether it is appropriate to the work.

What does the style lend to the work as a whole?

Style should work with other elements to produce a final unity.

Style is the author's personal expression.

  • It reveals his/her way of perceiving experience and organizing  perceptions.

  • Style includes the author's choice of words as well as arrangement of words into phrases, sentences, and paragraphs.

Elements of style:  diction, imagery, and syntax

  • Diction: the author's choice of words and their effect on the total work

Denotative meaning:  the literal meaning of a word

Connotative meaning:  suggestions and associations resulting from a word or group of words.

Several words may have the same denotation, while differing significantly in their connotation.

Is a writer's style basically denotative or connotative?

Imagery:  the evocation of a sensory experience through words.

  • Literal images:  Suggest no change or extension in the meaning of a word; supply specific, concrete details.

  • Figurative images, or figures of speech; similes and metaphors.

  • Recurrent images:  Repetitions of the same or similar images throughout a work can reinforce an effect that the author is trying to create.

  • Symbols:  The author's attempts to represent areas of human experience that ordinary language cannot express;  the symbol evokes a concrete, objective reality while suggesting a level of meaning beyond that reality

  • Archetypal image:  concept of Carl Jung.  There are images and symbols that are universal, existing from one culture to another, that always have the same meaning.