LITERATURE - ˈlɪt(ə)rətʃə/ noun -
1. written works, especially those considered of superior or lasting artistic merit.
2. books and writings published on a particular subject.3. leaflets and other printed matter used to advertise products or give advice.
Three (3) Genres of Literature
1. PROSE Consists of those written within the common flow of conversation in sentence and paragraphs. Prose is a form of language which applies ordinary grammatical structure and natural flow of speech rather than rhythmic structure (as in traditional poetry). It is commonly used, for example:
1. NOVELThis is long narrative divided into chapters. The events are taken from to life stories…and spam long period of time.
2. SHORT STORYIt is a narrative involving one or more characters, one plot and one single impression.
3. PLAYSThis is presented on stage, is divided into acts and has many scenes.
4. LEGENDSThese are fictitious narratives, usually about origins.
5. FABLESThese are also fictitious, they deal animals and imitate things that speak and act like people, and their purpose is to enlighten the minds of children to events that can mold their ways and attitudes.
6. ANECDOTESA merely product of the writer’s imagination and the main aim is to bring out lessons to the readers and attitudes.
7. ESSAYThis is expresses the viewpoint of the writer about a particular problem or event.
8. BIOGRAPHYIt is Deals with the life of a person, which may be about himself, his autobiography or that of others.
9. NEWSIs Report of everyday events in society, government, science and industry and accidents, happening nationally or not.
10. ORATIONA formal treatment of a subject and is intended to be spoken in public. It appeals to the intellect, to the will or to the emotions of the audience.
2. POETRYComes from the Greek poiesis — with a broad meaning of a "making", seen also in such terms as "hemopoiesis"; more narrowly, the making of poetry. It is refers to those expressions in verse, with measure and rhyme, line and stanza and has a more melodious tone.
TWO TYPES OF POETRY:
1. NARRATIVE POETRY - describes important events in life real or imaginary.
2. LYRIC POETRY - refers to that king of poetry meant to be song to the accompaniment of a lyre, but now this applies to any type of poetry that expresses emotions and fillings of the poet. TYPES OF
NARRATIVE POETRY:
A. EPICAn extended narrative about heroic exploits often under supernatural control. It may deal with heroes and gods.
B. METRICAL TALEA Narrative, which is written in verse and can be classified either as a ballad or as a metrical romance.
C. BALADS Of the narrative poems, this is the shortest and simplest. It has a simple structure and tells of a single incident.
TYPES OF LYRIC POETRY:
A. FOLKSONGS (AWIT NG BAYAN) These are short poems intended to be sung. The common theme is love, despair, grief, doubt, joy, hope and sorrow.
B. SONNETS A lyric poem of 14 lines dealing with an emotion, a feeling of an idea.
C. ELEGY This is a lyric poem, which express feelings of grief and melancholy and whose theme is death.
D. ODE A poem of noble feeling, expressed with dignity, with no definite syllables or definite number of lines in a stanza.
E. PSALM (DALIT) It is a sound praising god or the Virgin Mary and containing a philosophy of life.
F. AWIT (SONG) Measures of a 12 (do decasyllabic) and slowly sung to the accompaniment of a guitar or Banduria.
G. CORRIDO Have measure of eight (octosyllabic) and recited to a martial beat.
3. DRAMA Drama is the theatrical dialogue performed on stage, it consists of 5 acts.
TYPES OF DRAMA:
A. COMEDY It is comes from the Greek “komos” meaning festivity or revelry. This is usually light and written with the purpose of amusing, and usually has a happy ending.
B. MELODRAMA It is usually used in musical plays with opera. It arouses immediate and intense emotions and is usually sad but there is a happy ending for the principal character.
C. TRAGEDY Involves the hero struggling mightily against dynamic forces; he meets death or ruin without success and satisfaction obtained by the protagonist in a comedy.
D. FARCE Exaggerated comedy, situations are too ridiculous to be true; and the characters seem to be caricatures and the motives undignified and absurd.
FICTION VS. NONFICTION Texts are commonly classified as fiction or nonfiction. The distinction addresses whether a text discusses the world of the imagination (fiction) or the real world (nonfiction).
Fiction: poems, stories, plays, novels
Nonfiction: newspaper stories, editorials, personal accounts, journal articles, textbooks, legal documents
Fiction is commonly divided into three areas according to the general appearance of the text:· stories and novels: prose--that is, the usual paragraph structure--forming chapters
· poetry: lines of varying length, forming stanzas
· plays: spoken lines and stage directions, arranged in scenes and acts
Other than for documentaries, movies are fiction because they present a "made up" story. Movie reviews, on the other hand, are nonfiction, because they discuss something real—namely movies.
ELEMENTS OF FICTION
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The six major elements of fiction are character, plot, point of view, setting, style, and theme.
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1. Character -- A figure in a literary work (personality, gender, age, etc). E. M. Forester makes a distinction between flat and round characters. Flat characters are types or caricatures defined by a single idea of quality, whereas round characters have the three-dimensional complexity of real people.
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2. Plot –- the major events that move the action in a narrative. It is the sequence of major events in a story, usually in a cause-effect relation.
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3. Point of View -- the vantage point from which a narrative is told. A narrative is typically told from a first-person or third-person point of view. In a narrative told from a first-person perspective, the author tells the story through a character who refers to himself or herself as "I." Third –person narratives come in two types: omniscient and limited. An author taking an omniscient point of view assumes the vantage point of an all-knowing narrator able not only to recount the action thoroughly and reliably but also to enter the mind of any character in the work or any time in order to reveal his or her thoughts, feelings, and beliefs directly to the reader. An author using the limited point of view recounts the story through the eyes of a single character (or occasionally more than one, but not all or the narrator would be an omniscient narrator).
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4. Setting –- That combination of place, historical time, and social milieu that provides the general background for the characters and plot of a literary work. The general setting of a work may differ from the specific setting of an individual scene or event.
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5.Style -- The author’s type of diction (choice of words), syntax (arrangement of words), and other linguistic features of a work.
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6. Theme(s) -- The central and dominating idea (or ideas) in a literary work. The term also indicates a message or moral implicit in any work of art.
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Reference:http://renzpaz.blogspot.com/2008/12/general-types-of-literature.html
ReplyDeletehttp://ghalegomez-philippineliterature.blogspot.com/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literature_of_the_Philippines#Prose
http://web.csulb.edu/~yamadaty/EleFic.html
https://www.thoughtco.com/top-figures-of-speech-1691818
http://www.criticalreading.com/fictionvnonfiction.htm