Literary Terms, PAR-RāW
Want to be able to distinguish your limericks from your haikus and your paeans from your panegyrics? Dive deep into literary terms and forms.
Literary Terms Encyclopedia Articles By Title
parody, in literature, an imitation of the style and manner of a particular writer or school of writers. Parody......
partimen, a lyric poem of dispute composed by Provençal troubadours in which one poet stated a proposition and......
pasquinade, brief and generally anonymous satirical comment in prose or verse that ridicules a contemporary leader......
Passion play, religious drama of medieval origin dealing with the suffering, death, and Resurrection of Christ.......
pastoral literature, class of literature that presents the society of shepherds as free from the complexity and......
pathetic fallacy, poetic practice of attributing human emotion or responses to nature, inanimate objects, or animals.......
pattern poetry, verse in which the typography or lines are arranged in an unusual configuration, usually to convey......
PEN/Nabokov Award, annual American literary award for lifetime achievement established by the PEN American Center,......
penny dreadful, an inexpensive novel of violent adventure or crime that was especially popular in mid-to-late Victorian......
pensée, a thought expressed in literary form. A pensée can be short and in a specific form, such as an aphorism......
pentameter, in poetry, a line of verse containing five metrical feet. In English verse, in which pentameter has......
Pereval, group of post-Revolutionary Russian writers opposed to the suppression of nonconformist literature and......
peripeteia, the turning point in a drama after which the plot moves steadily to its denouement. It is discussed......
periphrasis, the use of a longer phrasing in place of a possible shorter form of expression; a roundabout or indirect......
Persian literature, body of writings in New Persian (also called Modern Persian), the form of the Persian language......
persona, in literature, the person who is understood to be speaking (or thinking or writing) a particular work.......
personification, figure of speech in which human characteristics are attributed to an abstract quality, animal,......
Philander, in Renaissance literature, a common name for a flirtatious male character who has many love...
philosophe, any of the literary men, scientists, and thinkers of 18th-century France who were united, in spite......
phlyakes, farces adopted from Greek Middle Comedy plays and especially popular in southern Italy in the 4th and......
physical poetry, poetry (such as Imagist poetry) that is primarily concerned with the projection of a descriptive......
picaresque novel, early form of novel, usually a first-person narrative, relating the adventures of a rogue or......
Pindaric ode, ceremonious poem by or in the manner of Pindar, a Greek professional lyrist of the 5th century bc.......
pixie, in the folklore of southwestern England, tiny elflike spirit or mischievous fairy dressed in green who dances......
ploce, the emphatic repetition of a word, with particular reference to its special significance (as in “a wife......
plot, in fiction, the structure of interrelated actions, consciously selected and arranged by the author. Plot......
poet laureate, title first granted in England in the 17th century for poetic excellence. Its holder is a salaried......
poetic diction, grandiose, elevated, and unfamiliar language, supposedly the prerogative of poetry but not of prose.......
poetic imagery, the sensory and figurative language used in poetry. The object or experience that a poet is contemplating......
poetic justice, in literature, an outcome in which vice is punished and virtue rewarded, usually in a manner peculiarly......
poetic license, the right assumed by poets to alter or invert standard syntax or depart from common diction or......
poetry, literature that evokes a concentrated imaginative awareness of experience or a specific emotional response......
point of view, in literature, the vantage point from which a story is presented. A common point of view is the......
Polish literature, body of writings in Polish, one of the Slavic languages. The Polish national literature holds......
polyphonic prose, a freely rhythmical form of prose that employs characteristic devices of verse other than strict......
polyptoton, the rhetorical repetition within the same sentence of a word in a different case, inflection, or voice......
Portuguese literature, the body of writing in the Portuguese language produced by the peoples of Portugal, which......
poststructuralism, movement in literary criticism and philosophy begun in France in the late 1960s. Drawing upon......
poulter’s measure, a metre in which lines of 12 and 14 syllables alternate. Poulter is an obsolete variant of poulterer......
poète maudit, (French: “accursed poet”), in literary criticism, the poet as an outcast of modern society, despised......
praise song, one of the most widely used poetic forms in Africa; a series of laudatory epithets applied to gods,......
preciosity, style of thought and expression exhibiting delicacy of taste and sentiment, prevalent in the 17th-century......
prequel, a literary or dramatic work whose story precedes that of an earlier-written work. For example, Lillian......
Prix Goncourt, French literary prize, one of the most important in France. It was first conceived in 1867 by the......
problem play, type of drama that developed in the 19th century to deal with controversial social issues in a realistic......
prolepsis, a figure of speech in which a future act or development is represented as if already accomplished or......
prologue, a preface or introduction to a literary work. In a dramatic work, the term describes a speech, often......
prose poem, a work in prose that has some of the technical or literary qualities of a poem (such as regular rhythm,......
protagonist, in ancient Greek drama, the first or leading actor. The poet Thespis is credited with having invented......
Provençal literature, the body of writings in the Occitan, or Provençal, language of Provence and neighbouring......
proverb, succinct and pithy saying in general use, expressing commonly held ideas and beliefs. Proverbs are part......
psychological novel, work of fiction in which the thoughts, feelings, and motivations of the characters are of......
puck, in medieval English folklore, a malicious fairy or demon. In Old and Middle English the word meant simply......
Pulitzer Prize, any of a series of annual prizes awarded by Columbia University, New York City, for outstanding......
pun, a humorous use of a word in such a way as to suggest different meanings or applications, or a play on words,......
Punjabi literature, body of writing in the Punjabi language. Punjabi developed a written literature later than......
pure poetry, message-free verse that is concerned with exploring the essential musical nature of the language rather......
Pushkin Prize, Russian literary prize established in 1881 in honour of Aleksandr Pushkin, one of Russia’s greatest......
putative author, the author of a work as defined in the work rather than the actual author, or the person or character......
pyŏlgok, Korean poetic form that flourished during the Koryŏ period (935–1392). Of folk origin, the pyŏlgok was......
qaṣīdah, poetic form developed in pre-Islamic Arabia and perpetuated throughout Islamic literary history into the......
quantitative verse, in prosody, a metrical system based on the duration of the syllables that make up the feet,......
quatrain, a piece of verse complete in four rhymed lines. The word is derived from the French quatre, meaning “four.”......
race, milieu, and moment, according to the French critic Hippolyte Taine, the three principal motives or conditioning......
Raven cycle, collection of trickster-transformer tales originating among the Native Americans of the Northwest......
readerly and writerly, opposite types of literary text, as defined by the French critic Roland Barthes in his book......
redondilla, a Spanish stanza form consisting of four trochaic lines, usually of eight syllables each, with a rhyme......
refrain, phrase, line, or group of lines repeated at intervals throughout a poem, generally at the end of the stanza.......
renga, genre of Japanese linked-verse poetry in which two or more poets supplied alternating sections of a poem.......
Restoration literature, English literature written after the Restoration of the monarchy in England in 1660 following......
Return to normalcy, central campaign slogan of Republican nominee Warren G. Harding’s successful campaign for the......
revenge tragedy, drama in which the dominant motive is revenge for a real or imagined injury; it was a favourite......
rhapsode, a singer in ancient Greece. Ancient scholars suggested two etymologies. The first related the word with......
rhetoric, the principles of training communicators—those seeking to persuade or inform. In the 20th century it......
rhupunt, one of the 24 metres of the Welsh bardic tradition. A rhupunt is a verse composed of three, four, or five......
rhyme, the correspondence of two or more words with similar-sounding final syllables placed so as to echo one another.......
rhyme royal, seven-line iambic pentameter stanza rhyming ababbcc. The rhyme royal was first used in English verse......
rhyme scheme, the formal arrangement of rhymes in a stanza or a poem. If it is one of a number of set rhyme patterns,......
rhythm, in poetry, the patterned recurrence, within a certain range of regularity, of specific language features,......
riddle, deliberately enigmatic or ambiguous question requiring a thoughtful and often witty answer. The riddle......
rime riche, in French and English prosody, a rhyme produced by agreement in sound not only of the last accented......
rime suffisante, in French and English prosody, end rhyme produced by agreement in sound of an accented final vowel......
rispetto, a Tuscan folk verse form, a version of strambotto. The rispetto lyric is generally composed of eight......
robinsonade, any novel written in imitation of Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe (1719–22) that deals with the problem......
robāʿī, in Persian literature, genre of poetry consisting of a quatrain with the rhyme scheme aaba. Together with......
roman à clef, novel that has the extraliterary interest of portraying well-known real people more or less thinly......
roman-fleuve, series of novels, each one complete in itself, that deals with one central character, an era of national......
romance, literary form, usually characterized by its treatment of chivalry, that came into being in France in the......
romance stanza, a six-line verse stanza common in metrical romances in which the first, second, fourth, and fifth......
romancero, collective body of Spanish folk ballads (romances), which constitute a unique tradition of European......
Romanian literature, body of writings in the Romanian language, the development of which is paralleled by a rich......
rondeau, one of several formes fixes (“fixed forms”) in French lyric poetry and song of the 14th and 15th centuries.......
rondel, a fixed poetic form that runs on two rhymes. It is a variant of the rondeau. The rondel often consists......
roundelay, a poem with a refrain that recurs frequently or at fixed intervals, as in a rondel. The term is also......
rove-over, having an extrametrical syllable at the end of one line that forms a foot with the first syllable of......
Russian literature, the body of written works produced in the Russian language, beginning with the Christianization......
Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, annual prize given by the Poetry Foundation—an independent literary organization and publisher—to......
récit, a brief novel, usually with a simple narrative line. One of the writers who consciously used the form was......
ríma, versified sagas, or episodes from the sagas, a form of adaptation that was popular in Iceland from the 15th......
rāwī, (Arabic: “reciter”), in Arabic literature, professional reciter of poetry. The rāwīs preserved pre-Islāmic......