Literary Terms, BIL-COR
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Literary Terms Encyclopedia Articles By Title
bildungsroman, class of novel that depicts and explores the manner in which the protagonist develops morally and......
biography, form of literature, commonly considered nonfictional, the subject of which is the life of an individual.......
blank verse, unrhymed iambic pentameter, the preeminent dramatic and narrative verse form in English and also the......
blason, a type of catalog verse in which something is either praised or blamed through a detailed listing of its......
blog, online journal where an individual, group, or corporation presents a record of activities, thoughts, or beliefs.......
blood, a literary term of British origin referring to a lurid work of fiction, especially a cheap and ill-written......
bob and wheel, in alliterative verse, a group of typically five rhymed lines following a section of unrhymed lines,......
bogatyr, one of a group of heroes of the Russian folk epics known as byliny. The duty of the bogatyrs was to protect......
bogeyman, any of a variety of fictional and oftentimes folkloric monsters described in stories designed to frighten......
Bollingen Prize, award for achievement in American poetry, originally conferred by the Library of Congress with......
Booker Prize, prestigious British award given annually to a full-length novel in English. Booker McConnell, a multinational......
border ballad, type of spirited heroic ballad celebrating the raids, feuds, seductions, and elopements on the border......
bouts-rimés, (French: “rhymed ends”), rhymed words or syllables to which verses are written, best known from a......
Brazilian literature, the body of written works produced in the Portuguese language in Brazil. Brazil was claimed......
Breton lay, poetic form so called because Breton professional storytellers supposedly recited similar poems, though......
Breton literature, the body of writings in the Breton language of northwestern France. No literary texts in Old......
broadside ballad, a descriptive or narrative verse or song, commonly in a simple ballad form, on a popular theme,......
broken rhyme, a rhyme in which one of the rhyming elements is actually two words (i.e., “gutteral” with “sputter......
broken-backed line, in poetry, a line truncated in the middle. The term is used especially of John Lydgate’s poetry,......
brownie, in English and Scottish folklore, a small, industrious fairy or hobgoblin believed to inhabit houses and......
Bulgarian literature, body of writings in the Bulgarian language. Its origin is closely linked to Christianization......
burlesque, in literature, comic imitation of a serious literary or artistic form that relies on an extravagant......
Burmese literature, the body of writings in the Burmese language produced in Myanmar (Burma). The stone inscription......
Burns metre, in poetry, a stanza often used by Robert Burns and other Scottish poets. The stanza consists of six......
bylina, traditional form of Old Russian and Russian heroic narrative poetry transmitted orally. The oldest byliny......
Büchner Prize, prestigious German prize established in 1923 by the government of Volksstaat Hessen (state of Hesse,......
caesura, in modern prosody, a pause within a poetic line that breaks the regularity of the metrical pattern. It......
Caldecott Medal, annual prize awarded “to the artist of the most distinguished American picture book for children.”......
Canadian literature, the body of written works produced by Canadians. Reflecting the country’s dual origin and......
cancioneiro, (Portuguese: “songbook”), collection of Portuguese lyrics (cantigas) dating from the 12th century.......
cantar, in Spanish literature, originally, the lyrics of a song. The word was later used for a number of different......
canto, major division of an epic or other long narrative poem. An Italian term, derived from the Latin cantus (“song”),......
Caribbean literature, literary works of the Caribbean area written in Spanish, French, or English. The literature......
casual, an essay written in a familiar, often humorous style. The word is usually associated with the style of......
Catalan literature, the body of literature written in the Catalan language, a Romance language spoken primarily......
catalexis and acatalexis, in prosody, an omission or incompleteness in the last foot of a line or other unit in......
catalog verse, verse that presents a list of people, objects, or abstract qualities. Such verse exists in almost......
catastasis, the dramatic complication that immediately precedes the climax of a play or that occurs during the......
catastrophe, in literature, the final action that completes the unraveling of the plot in a play, especially in......
catharsis, the purification or purgation of the emotions (especially pity and fear) primarily through art. In criticism,......
causerie, in literature, a short informal essay, often on a literary topic. This sense of the word is derived from......
Celtic literature, the body of writings composed in Irish and the languages derived from it, Scottish Gaelic and......
Central Asian literatures, the poetry and prose writings produced in a variety of languages in Central Asia, roughly......
Cerberus, in Greek mythology, the monstrous watchdog of the underworld. He was usually said to have three heads,......
Cervantes Prize, literary award established in 1975 by the Spanish Ministry of Culture; the prize was first awarded......
Chagatai literature, the body of written works produced in Chagatai, a classical Turkic literary language of Central......
changeling, in European folklore, a deformed or imbecilic offspring of fairies or elves substituted by them surreptitiously......
chanson de geste, any of the Old French epic poems forming the core of the Charlemagne legends. More than 80 chansons,......
chanson de toile, an early form of French lyric poetry dating from the beginning of the 12th century. The poems......
chant royal, fixed form of verse developed by French poets of the 13th to the 15th century. Its standard form consisted......
chantefable, a medieval tale of adventure told in alternating sections of sung verse and recited prose. The word......
Chanticleer, character in several medieval beast tales in which human society is satirized through the actions......
character writer, any writer who produced a type of character sketch that was popular in 17th-century England and......
charactonym, a name of a fictional character that suggests a distinctive trait of that character. Examples of charactonyms......
Charlemagne legend, fusion of folktale motifs, pious exempla, and hero tales that became attached to Charlemagne,......
charm, a practice or expression believed to have magic power, similar to an incantation or a spell. Charms are......
chaser, a literary work or portion of a literary work that is of a light or mollifying nature in comparison with......
chastushka, a rhymed folk verse usually composed of four lines. The chastushka is traditional in form but often......
Chekhov’s gun, principle in drama, literature, and other narrative forms asserting that every element introduced......
children’s literature, the body of written works and accompanying illustrations produced in order to entertain......
Chinese literature, the body of works written in Chinese, including lyric poetry, historical and didactic writing,......
- Introduction
- Mythology, Folklore, Legends
- Qin, Han, Classics
- Six Dynasties, Sui Dynasty, 220-618 CE
- Tang, Five Dynasties, Poetry
- Song Dynasty, Poetry, Novels
- Yuan Dynasty, Poetry, Novels
- Ming Dynasty, Poetry, Novels
- Qing Dynasty, Poetry, Novels
- 20th Century, Poetry, Novels
- Ancient Texts, Poetry, Novels
- Ancient Texts, Poetry, Novels
- Taiwan, Post-1949, Modernization
choka, a form of waka (Japanese court poetry of the 6th to 14th century) consisting of alternating lines of five......
chronicle, a usually continuous historical account of events arranged in order of time without analysis or interpretation.......
chronicle play, drama with a theme from history consisting usually of loosely connected episodes chronologically......
chuanqi, a form of traditional Chinese operatic drama that developed from the nanxi in the late 14th century. Chuanqi......
chupacabra, in Latin American popular legend, a monstrous creature that attacks animals and consumes their blood.......
ci, in Chinese poetry, song form characterized by lines of unequal length with prescribed rhyme schemes and tonal......
cielito, a poetic form associated with gaucho literature, consisting of an octosyllabic quatrain written in colloquial......
cinquain, a five-line stanza. The American poet Adelaide Crapsey (1878–1914), applied the term in particular to......
citizen comedy, a form of drama produced in the early 17th century in England. Such comedies were set in London......
citizen journalism, journalism that is conducted by people who are not professional journalists but who disseminate......
Classical literature, the literature of ancient Greece and Rome (see Greek literature; Latin literature). The term,......
clausula, in Greek and Latin rhetoric, the rhythmic close to a sentence or clause, or a terminal cadence. The clausula......
clerihew, a light verse quatrain in lines usually of varying length, rhyming aabb, and usually dealing with a person......
climax, (Greek: “ladder”), in dramatic and nondramatic fiction, the point at which the highest level of interest......
cloak and sword drama, 17th-century Spanish plays of upper middle class manners and intrigue. The name derives......
closet drama, a drama suited primarily for reading rather than production. Examples of the genre include John Milton’s......
cockneyism, the writing or the qualities of the writing of the 19th-century English authors John Keats, Percy Bysshe......
colon, in Greek or Latin verse, a rhythmic measure of lyric metre (“lyric” in the sense of verse that is sung rather......
columbiad, any of certain epics recounting the European settlement and growth of the United States. It may have......
columnist, the author or editor of a regular signed contribution to a newspaper, magazine, or Web site, usually......
comedia, a Spanish regular-verse drama or comedy. Specific forms include the comedia de capa y espada, a cloak-and-sword......
comedy, type of drama or other art form the chief object of which, according to modern notions, is to amuse. It......
common metre, a metre used in English ballads that is equivalent to ballad metre, though ballad metre is often......
common particular metre, a variation of ballad metre in which the four-stress lines are doubled to produce a stanza......
Commonwealth Book Prize, any of the annual literary prizes awarded from 1987 to 2013 by the Commonwealth Foundation,......
complaint, in literature, a formerly popular variety of poem that laments or protests unrequited love or tells......
comédie larmoyante, 18th-century genre of French sentimental drama, which formed a bridge between the decaying......
conceit, figure of speech, usually a simile or metaphor, that forms an extremely ingenious or fanciful parallel......
conceptismo, (from Spanish concepto, “literary conceit”), in Spanish literature, an affectation of style cultivated......
concrete poetry, poetry in which the poet’s intent is conveyed by graphic patterns of letters, words, or symbols......
confession, in literature, an autobiography, either real or fictitious, in which intimate and hidden details of......
consonance, the recurrence or repetition of identical or similar consonants; specifically the correspondence of......
contamination, in manuscript tradition, a blending whereby a single manuscript contains readings originating from......
conte, a short tale, often recounting an adventure. The term may also refer to a narrative that is somewhat shorter......
conversation piece, a piece of writing (such as a play) that depends for its effect chiefly upon the wit or excellent......
Coptic literature, body of writings, almost entirely religious, that dates from the 2nd century, when the Coptic......
coquecigrue, an imaginary creature regarded as an embodiment of absolute absurdity. François Rabelais in Gargantua......
Coretta Scott King Book Awards, any of a series of awards given in the United States by the American Library Association......
Cornish literature, the body of writing in Cornish, the Celtic language of Cornwall in southwestern Britain. The......