Struggling with your prescribed literature?
Our Literature Study Guides provide insights and analysis of themes and characters and includes guidelines for writing your exam.
a narrator that is confined to what the I of the narrator knows and therefore limits the point of view presented to the reader. Such a narrator may be a witness to the events, e.g. Marlowe in Heart of Darkness, or a participant in the action, e.g. Nick in The Great Gatsby. In both cases the narrator might be reliable (we are led to understand that we can believe what Nick says and that his judgement is reliable) or unreliable (we have to draw our own conclusions about Marloweâ??s observations).
a phrase or idea that has been overused and is clearly not an original statement, e.g. time will...
lighting that lights up a whole scene fairly equally with very few shadows. The key light is the...
an adjective that is the adjectival form of proper nouns and always has a capital letter, e.g....
action taking place in the order that things actually happen, e.g. The author wrote the events...
the names of terms we use to talk about language, e.g. phrase, verb, figure of speech.