Ballad
Ballad tells a story, tragic , romantic or heroic, narrative
Elegy
Elegy expresses feelings, Sad poem, Praises someone who is dead
Mimesis vs poiesis
Poesis creates New
Mimesis represents The existing
Stanzel
First Person -> i perspective
Authorial -> Outside omniscient
Figural -> outside but hidden
Explicit vs implicit subjectivity
Explicit: direct Stated and obvious -> i me my or direct judgement
Implicit: indirect -> irony, metaphor, lyrical I
Freytags pyramid
Exposition, rising action, peripeteia, climax, falling action, catastrophe
Overt vs covert narator
Overt: highly visible, directly addresses The reader
Covert: hidden, presence almost undetectable
Sonnet
14 Lines
4 stanzas
2 stanzas a 4 Vers quatrains
Next 2 stanzas: 3 Vers tercets
Petrarchan sonnte
Octave ABBa/ ABBA and sestet cdc/dcd
Shakespearen sonnet
Three quatrains and couplet abab
Ode
Formal often ceremonial Lyric poem that praises or glorifies a person, Place, thing or idea, often free Verse form
Lyrik vs epic poetry
Epic Focus on action, Long narrative, third person
while Lyric ephasize feelings, Short, First person expression of personal emotions
Rhyme patterns
Alternate: abab
Coupled: aabb
Enclosed: abba
Limerick: aabba
Ballade: ababcbc
Fictionality
A text is created from The imagination rather than real life Events
Canon
A set of Texts that serve as a recognized standard of stylistic quality, cultural or Social significance and intellectual value
Lyrical i
Poetic Voice or persona who experiences , observes and narrates emotions or actions
Anaphora
Repeats words at The beginning of a sentence (anaphora) or at the end (epiphora)
Alliteration
The usage of The same letter or Sound at The beginning of closely connected words
Assonance
Repetition of vowel Sounds in nearby words
Zuletzt geändertvor 2 Tagen