How to Read Literature
How to Read LiteratureScroll to Find Term
Analyze –
review critically considering possibility of author bias, accuracy and completeness of information presented, use of language to convey message and influence interpretation, and implications of the information presented.
Annotate –
taking detailed notes on specific words of importance, sometimes made in the margin of a book
Assumptions –
guesses; information that is not based on evidence
Commercial literature –
literature written to appeal to popular audiences and not written with any deeper meaning to be conveyed
Conventional theme –
a theme that has been commonly used
Conventions –
way of analyzing used by people in a community
Evaluate –
form a judgment as to information provided on content
Explication –
a close and detailed analysis of a work on literature in terms of one or more of the literary elements.
Facts –
the truth; information based on evidence
Genre –
categories of literature: fiction, poetry, drama
Highlight –
use of a mark such as underlining or a highlight pen to indicate important words in a piece of literature
Imaginative literature –
literature created by an author’s imagination to convey some personal feeling or observation or message
Interpretative literature –
literature intended to say more than just the story on a larger issue and to be interpreted; literature that can have more than one meaning.
Literary argument –
taking a position on a controversial issue concerning a work of literature such as that the use of symbols in “Hills Like White Elephants” is the predominant literary element or that the man in “Hills Like White Elephants” is not justified in his attitude about the operation.
Literary criticism –
essays that analyze, evaluate, and interpret literature
Literary canon –
a collection of literature that is generally considered significant
Literary elements –
ways that literature is analyzed including plot, setting, characters, imagery, symbolism, figures of speech, irony, allusion, allegory, and theme.
Opinion –
a personal evaluation
Personal perspective –
a position based on personal experiences
Safe reading –
a reading that interprets only on obvious, superficial elements of a piece of literature
Strong reading –
a reading that questions the piece of literature and challenges commonly held beliefs and makes interesting and novel interpretations of literature.
Style –
the way in which an author uses language and presents the content; generally described in terms of literary elements such as use of symbolism, irony, figures of speech, plot and character development, and theme.
Theme –
the central idea of a fiction