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What is literature?
• Literature is the total of preserved writings
belonging to a given language or people.
• Literature is the class or the total of
writings, of a given country or period, is
which notable for literary form or
expression, as distinguished, on the one
hand, from works merely of technical or
erudite and, on the other, from journalistic
or other ephemeral writings.
2/17/2017 1
• Literature consists of those writings which
interpret the meanings of nature and life,
in words of charm and power, touched
with the personality of the author, in artistic
forms of permanent interests.
• It is a product of life and about life.
• It uses language as medium
2/17/2017 2
• Imaginative literature or “literature of power”
includes poems, short stories, novels, and
plays. It interprets human experience by
presenting fictitious persons, incidents, or
situations, not by actual truths about
particular events.
• Non-fiction or “literature of knowledge”
includes biographies and essays which
presents actual facts, events, experiences
and ideas.
2/17/2017 3
Why study literature?
• To express one’s self
• To have access culture
• To recognize human dreams and struggles
• To develop mature sensibility and
compassion for the condition of all creation
• To appreciate beauty
• To shape one’s own goals and values and
clarify one’s own identity
• To develop wider perspective of events
2/17/2017 4
Main ingredients of literature
• Subject
• Form
• Point of view
2/17/2017 5
Literary types or genre
• Fiction
• Essay
• Poetry
• Drama
2/17/2017 6
Presentation and structure of literature
2/17/2017 7
GENRE AUDIENCE AUTHOR WORK
Drama group absent performed
Epic group present recited
Short story private concealed read
Novel private concealed read
Poetry ignored present recited (or
sung)
Essay private implied read
Literary standards
• Artistry
• Intellectual value
• Suggestiveness
• Spiritual value
• Permanence
• Universality
• Style
2/17/2017 8
The Form of the Poem
• A poem is formed by means
of verses that are arranged
into a stanza or stanzas,
and that are regulated in
flow by meter and rhyme.
Poetry
• It is a rhythmic imaginative language
expressing the invention, thought,
imagination, taste, passion, and insight of the
human soul.
• According to William Wordsworth, it is “the
spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings”
taking its origin from “emotion recollected in
tranquility.”
• For Edgar Allan Poe, poetry is the “rhythmical
creation of beauty”
2/17/2017 10
Characteristics of poetry
• Rhythm
1. Meter
2. Rhyme
3. Sound devices
• Imagery
1. Figures of speech
2. Symbols
• Sense or meaning
2/17/2017 11
• Verse – it is a single line of a
poem. It may come short or
long but whatever, it serves as
a basic unit of stanza
• Stanza – it is a set of verses
arranged to make a part of a
poem or to serve as the poem
itself.
The stanza may be:
• A couplet if it has two
verses
• A tercet if it has three
• A quatrain if it has four
• A cinquain if it has five
A poem may also be
• A sonnet which consists of
fourteen lines
• A haiku which consists of three
verses made up of seventeen
syllables, with the first and third
verses with five syllables. The
pattern is 5-7-5.
Couplet
I shall haunt you, O my lost one, as the twilight
Haunts a reed-entangled trail,
“To A Lost One”
by Angela Manalang Gloria
Tercet
Who’er she be,
That not impossible she
That shall command my heart and me
“Wishes for the (Supposed) Mistress”
by Richard Crashaw
Quatrain
Gather ye rose-buds while you may
Old time is still a-flying:
And this same flower that smiles to-day,
Tomorrow will be dying
“To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time”
by Robert Herrick
Cinquain
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I –
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
“The Road Not Taken”
by Robert Frost
Sonnet
Let me not to the marriage of true minds
Admit impediments, love is not love
Which alters when it alteration finds,
Or bends with the remover to remove.
O no, it is an ever fixèd mark
That looks on tempests and is never shaken;
It is the star to every wand'ring bark,
Whose worth's unknown although his height be taken.
Love's not time's fool, though rosy lips and cheeks
Within his bending sickle's compass come,
Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks,
But bears it out even to the edge of doom:
If this be error and upon me proved,
I never writ, nor no man ever loved.
“Sonnet 116”
by William Shakespeare
Haiku
In the flood afloat
Form a boy’s notebook, a page
Now a paper boat
“Paper Boat”
by G. Burce Bunao
Meter
• Meter means measure. It poetry,
the verses are measured in foot,
a measurement that is either
disyllabic or trisyllabic long. A
disyllabic foot is two syllables
long while a trisyllabic foot is
three syllables long.
Disyllabic foot
• The iamb – is a foot composed of
one unaccented syllable followed
by one accented syllable.
Example:
x / x / x / x /
/Thy glance/ sweet maid/ when first/ we met
Disyllabic foot
• The trochee – is a foot composed
of one accented syllable followed
by one unaccented syllable.
Example:
/ x / x / x / x
/Spin him/ round and/ send him/ flying
Disyllabic foot
• The spondee – is a foot of two
accented syllables. In a verse, it
comes in combination with other foot
as it is rare that one verse would
contain all accented syllables.
Example:
/ / x / x / x /
/Heighho/ the tale/ was all/ a lie
Trisyllabic foot
• The dactyl – is a foot of one
accented syllable followed by two
unaccented.
Example:
/ x x / x x
/Boldly they/ fought and well
Trisyllabic foot
• The anapest – is a foot of two
unaccented syllables followed by
one accented.
Example:
x x / x x / x x /
/And the sound/ of a voice/ that is still
• Verse differ in one another in the
number of feet they contain. If a
verse has one foot, it is called a
monometer line; it it has two feet,
a dimeter line; if it has three feet,
a trimeter line; if it has four feet, a
tetrameter line; and if it has five
feet, a pentameter line.
/ x x / x x
/Boldly they/ fought and well/
Being a line of two feet is a dimeter
line and because each foot is a
dactyl, the line is called a dactylic
dimeter line
x / x / x / x /
/Thy glance/ sweet maid/ when first/ we met/
Being a line of four feet is a
tetrameter line and because each
foot is an iamb, the line is called a
iambic tetrameter line
• Not all verses are measured
as regularly as the previous
examples. Instead, some
verses are controlled by
some verbal devices such
as the end-stop or the run-
on.
The end-stop
• This is the verbal device that
makes every line of a poem
complete in thought. Thus,
causes a stop at the end of
every line, which stop serves
as the verse control.
The end-stop
Youth is full of pleasance,
Age is full of care;
Youth like summer morn,
Age like winter weather.
“A Madrigal”
by William Shakespeare
The run-on
• This is a verbal device that
makes the reading of the
verses go “running on” from
one verse to another until and
up to where the full thought is
conveyed.
The run-on
Lances and laces my lord
I place upon your head.
“Gifts”
by Cirilo Bautista
The Rhyme
• The rhyme makes the poem
musical sounding. It is the
identity of sounds within a
verse line or at the end of the
verse lines. The identity of
sound within is an internal
rhyme.
Internal Rhyme
For all averred, I had killed the bird
That made the breeze to blow.
Ah wretch! said they, the bird to slay
That made the breeze to blow.
“The Rime of the Ancient Mariner”
by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
The Rhyme
• The identity of the sound at the
end of the lines is called an
end rhyme and this may be
single or masculine end rhyme
or double or feminine end
rhyme
The Rhyme
• There is a single or masculine rhyme
when the last pronounced syllable of
one line and the last pronounced
syllable of another line are identical.
And there is double or masculine
rhyme when the last two pronounced
syllables of one line and the last two
syllables of another line are the same.
She holds no joys beyond the day’s tomorrow,
She finds no worlds beyond his arms embrace,
She looks upon the Form behind the furrow
Who is her Mind, her Motion, Time, and Space
“The Spouse”
by Luis Dato
Green – double (feminine rhyme)
Red – single (masculine rhyme)
• Alliteration – this is a rhyme
device which makes a poem
musical sounding by the repetition
of initial consonantal sounds.
• Euphony – this is a sound quality
of a poem affected by the use of
soft, fluid, pleasing sounds.
Silently sifting and veiling road, roof
and railing
Having difference, making
unevenness even,
Into angles and crevices softly drifting
and sailing
(Notice the alliterating s and r and the
euphonious sound of the underlined
phrases)
Kinds of poetry
• Lyric poetry
1. Simple lyric
2. Song (sacred or secular)
3. Sonnet
a. Italian/Petrarchan sonnet
b. English/Elizabethan/Shakespearean sonnet
c. Spenserian sonnet
4. Elegy
5. Ode
2/17/2017 42
• Narrative poetry
1. Ballad (folk and literary)
2. Metrical Tale
3. Metrical Romance
4. Epic
2/17/2017 43
Characteristics of epic
a. Broad in scope and theme; its subject matter is
often a mixture o legend, history, myth, religion and
tradition
b. The action is grand and in a huge scale, the
supernatural element is highly pronounced, the
characters are larger than life (god, demi-gods, and
highborn mortals)
c. The source of conflict involves elemental passions.
The events centers on a prodigious struggle or
effort to achieve a great purpose or carry out a great
task against powerful forces.
2/17/2017 44
Characteristics of epic
d. The plot consists of numerous episodes and sub-
plots people by numerous characters, each with his
own adventure and story; but all these are held
together by a unifying theme.
e. The plot often begins in medias res (in the middle or
near the end of the action) and the story is
completed by a series of flashbacks. This plot is
recounted in the epic poem is often just a portion of
a much larger story which is found in the mythology
of the nation.
f. The style is solemn and majestic in keeping with the
grandeur of the subject matter.
2/17/2017 45
• Dramatic poetry
1. Dramatic monologue
2. Soliloquy
3. Character sketch
2/17/2017 46
Prose
• Prose is discourse which uses sentences
usually forming paragraphs to express
ideas, feelings and actions. In subject
matter, prose generally concentrates on
the familiar and the ordinary. Prose is
mainly concerned with the ordinary, but it
may deal with subjects such as heroism,
beauty, love and the nobility of spirit which
usually find the most eloquent expression
in poetry.
2/17/2017 47
Distinction between prose and poetry
Poetry
• Expresses strong
emotion or lofty thought in
a compressed and
intense utterance
• Its main purpose is to
provide pleasure and
delight
• It appeals to the emotion
and imagination
Prose
• Is concerned with the
presentation of an idea,
concept or point of view
in a more ordinary and
leisurely manner
• Its purpose is to furnish
information, instruction, or
enlightenment
• It appeals to the intellect
2/17/2017 48
Elements of fiction
• Plot
• Setting
• Characterization
• Style
• Point of view
2/17/2017 49
Divisions of prose
• Novel
Bases for classification
 The novelist’s vision of life
a. Romantic fiction
b. Realistic fiction
c. Naturalistic fiction
2/17/2017 50
Writer’s choice of materials
a. Historical novel
b. Psychological novel
c. Social novel
 Structure of the novel
a. Panoramic novel
b. Dramatic novel
2/17/2017 51
Point of view
• Internal
1. The narrator is himself the protagonist or the
most important character
2. The story is told by a minor character who is
supposed to be present at the time of the
important incidents
3. Composite point of view – the reader is given
a comprehensive view of the different aspects
of the action and the different angles from
which the plot develops
2/17/2017 52
• External point of view – also called omniscient
point of view
2/17/2017 53
Short story
• It is an artistic form of prose fiction which
is centered on a single main incident and
is intended to produce a single dominant
impression.
• Economy, compression and emphasis
characterize the short story.
2/17/2017 54
Non-fiction
• Essay
1. Formal
2. Informal
• Oration
• Biography
• Autobiography, memoirs, letters and
epistles, diaries and journals
2/17/2017 55
Drama
• Tragedy
1. Serious drama
2. Tragicomedy
3. Melodrama
• Comedy
1. farce
2/17/2017 56
Styles of drama
• The realistic or illusionistic or
representational style
• The non-realistic or non-illusionistic or
presentational style
2/17/2017 57
Sources:
• Garcia, Carolina U. et al. (1993). A study of
literary types and forms. Manila: UST Publishing
House.
• Sebastian, Evelyn L. and Erlinda A. Cayao.
(2006). Readings in world literature. Quezon
City; C & E Publishing Inc.
• Tan, Arsenia B. (2001). Introduction to literature.
Fourth edition. Manila: Academic Publishing
Corporation
2/17/2017 58

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What is Literature

  • 1. What is literature? • Literature is the total of preserved writings belonging to a given language or people. • Literature is the class or the total of writings, of a given country or period, is which notable for literary form or expression, as distinguished, on the one hand, from works merely of technical or erudite and, on the other, from journalistic or other ephemeral writings. 2/17/2017 1
  • 2. • Literature consists of those writings which interpret the meanings of nature and life, in words of charm and power, touched with the personality of the author, in artistic forms of permanent interests. • It is a product of life and about life. • It uses language as medium 2/17/2017 2
  • 3. • Imaginative literature or “literature of power” includes poems, short stories, novels, and plays. It interprets human experience by presenting fictitious persons, incidents, or situations, not by actual truths about particular events. • Non-fiction or “literature of knowledge” includes biographies and essays which presents actual facts, events, experiences and ideas. 2/17/2017 3
  • 4. Why study literature? • To express one’s self • To have access culture • To recognize human dreams and struggles • To develop mature sensibility and compassion for the condition of all creation • To appreciate beauty • To shape one’s own goals and values and clarify one’s own identity • To develop wider perspective of events 2/17/2017 4
  • 5. Main ingredients of literature • Subject • Form • Point of view 2/17/2017 5
  • 6. Literary types or genre • Fiction • Essay • Poetry • Drama 2/17/2017 6
  • 7. Presentation and structure of literature 2/17/2017 7 GENRE AUDIENCE AUTHOR WORK Drama group absent performed Epic group present recited Short story private concealed read Novel private concealed read Poetry ignored present recited (or sung) Essay private implied read
  • 8. Literary standards • Artistry • Intellectual value • Suggestiveness • Spiritual value • Permanence • Universality • Style 2/17/2017 8
  • 9. The Form of the Poem • A poem is formed by means of verses that are arranged into a stanza or stanzas, and that are regulated in flow by meter and rhyme.
  • 10. Poetry • It is a rhythmic imaginative language expressing the invention, thought, imagination, taste, passion, and insight of the human soul. • According to William Wordsworth, it is “the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings” taking its origin from “emotion recollected in tranquility.” • For Edgar Allan Poe, poetry is the “rhythmical creation of beauty” 2/17/2017 10
  • 11. Characteristics of poetry • Rhythm 1. Meter 2. Rhyme 3. Sound devices • Imagery 1. Figures of speech 2. Symbols • Sense or meaning 2/17/2017 11
  • 12. • Verse – it is a single line of a poem. It may come short or long but whatever, it serves as a basic unit of stanza • Stanza – it is a set of verses arranged to make a part of a poem or to serve as the poem itself.
  • 13. The stanza may be: • A couplet if it has two verses • A tercet if it has three • A quatrain if it has four • A cinquain if it has five
  • 14. A poem may also be • A sonnet which consists of fourteen lines • A haiku which consists of three verses made up of seventeen syllables, with the first and third verses with five syllables. The pattern is 5-7-5.
  • 15. Couplet I shall haunt you, O my lost one, as the twilight Haunts a reed-entangled trail, “To A Lost One” by Angela Manalang Gloria
  • 16. Tercet Who’er she be, That not impossible she That shall command my heart and me “Wishes for the (Supposed) Mistress” by Richard Crashaw
  • 17. Quatrain Gather ye rose-buds while you may Old time is still a-flying: And this same flower that smiles to-day, Tomorrow will be dying “To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time” by Robert Herrick
  • 18. Cinquain I shall be telling this with a sigh Somewhere ages and ages hence: Two roads diverged in a wood, and I – I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference. “The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost
  • 19. Sonnet Let me not to the marriage of true minds Admit impediments, love is not love Which alters when it alteration finds, Or bends with the remover to remove. O no, it is an ever fixèd mark That looks on tempests and is never shaken; It is the star to every wand'ring bark, Whose worth's unknown although his height be taken. Love's not time's fool, though rosy lips and cheeks Within his bending sickle's compass come, Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks, But bears it out even to the edge of doom: If this be error and upon me proved, I never writ, nor no man ever loved. “Sonnet 116” by William Shakespeare
  • 20. Haiku In the flood afloat Form a boy’s notebook, a page Now a paper boat “Paper Boat” by G. Burce Bunao
  • 21. Meter • Meter means measure. It poetry, the verses are measured in foot, a measurement that is either disyllabic or trisyllabic long. A disyllabic foot is two syllables long while a trisyllabic foot is three syllables long.
  • 22. Disyllabic foot • The iamb – is a foot composed of one unaccented syllable followed by one accented syllable. Example: x / x / x / x / /Thy glance/ sweet maid/ when first/ we met
  • 23. Disyllabic foot • The trochee – is a foot composed of one accented syllable followed by one unaccented syllable. Example: / x / x / x / x /Spin him/ round and/ send him/ flying
  • 24. Disyllabic foot • The spondee – is a foot of two accented syllables. In a verse, it comes in combination with other foot as it is rare that one verse would contain all accented syllables. Example: / / x / x / x / /Heighho/ the tale/ was all/ a lie
  • 25. Trisyllabic foot • The dactyl – is a foot of one accented syllable followed by two unaccented. Example: / x x / x x /Boldly they/ fought and well
  • 26. Trisyllabic foot • The anapest – is a foot of two unaccented syllables followed by one accented. Example: x x / x x / x x / /And the sound/ of a voice/ that is still
  • 27. • Verse differ in one another in the number of feet they contain. If a verse has one foot, it is called a monometer line; it it has two feet, a dimeter line; if it has three feet, a trimeter line; if it has four feet, a tetrameter line; and if it has five feet, a pentameter line.
  • 28. / x x / x x /Boldly they/ fought and well/ Being a line of two feet is a dimeter line and because each foot is a dactyl, the line is called a dactylic dimeter line
  • 29. x / x / x / x / /Thy glance/ sweet maid/ when first/ we met/ Being a line of four feet is a tetrameter line and because each foot is an iamb, the line is called a iambic tetrameter line
  • 30. • Not all verses are measured as regularly as the previous examples. Instead, some verses are controlled by some verbal devices such as the end-stop or the run- on.
  • 31. The end-stop • This is the verbal device that makes every line of a poem complete in thought. Thus, causes a stop at the end of every line, which stop serves as the verse control.
  • 32. The end-stop Youth is full of pleasance, Age is full of care; Youth like summer morn, Age like winter weather. “A Madrigal” by William Shakespeare
  • 33. The run-on • This is a verbal device that makes the reading of the verses go “running on” from one verse to another until and up to where the full thought is conveyed.
  • 34. The run-on Lances and laces my lord I place upon your head. “Gifts” by Cirilo Bautista
  • 35. The Rhyme • The rhyme makes the poem musical sounding. It is the identity of sounds within a verse line or at the end of the verse lines. The identity of sound within is an internal rhyme.
  • 36. Internal Rhyme For all averred, I had killed the bird That made the breeze to blow. Ah wretch! said they, the bird to slay That made the breeze to blow. “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  • 37. The Rhyme • The identity of the sound at the end of the lines is called an end rhyme and this may be single or masculine end rhyme or double or feminine end rhyme
  • 38. The Rhyme • There is a single or masculine rhyme when the last pronounced syllable of one line and the last pronounced syllable of another line are identical. And there is double or masculine rhyme when the last two pronounced syllables of one line and the last two syllables of another line are the same.
  • 39. She holds no joys beyond the day’s tomorrow, She finds no worlds beyond his arms embrace, She looks upon the Form behind the furrow Who is her Mind, her Motion, Time, and Space “The Spouse” by Luis Dato Green – double (feminine rhyme) Red – single (masculine rhyme)
  • 40. • Alliteration – this is a rhyme device which makes a poem musical sounding by the repetition of initial consonantal sounds. • Euphony – this is a sound quality of a poem affected by the use of soft, fluid, pleasing sounds.
  • 41. Silently sifting and veiling road, roof and railing Having difference, making unevenness even, Into angles and crevices softly drifting and sailing (Notice the alliterating s and r and the euphonious sound of the underlined phrases)
  • 42. Kinds of poetry • Lyric poetry 1. Simple lyric 2. Song (sacred or secular) 3. Sonnet a. Italian/Petrarchan sonnet b. English/Elizabethan/Shakespearean sonnet c. Spenserian sonnet 4. Elegy 5. Ode 2/17/2017 42
  • 43. • Narrative poetry 1. Ballad (folk and literary) 2. Metrical Tale 3. Metrical Romance 4. Epic 2/17/2017 43
  • 44. Characteristics of epic a. Broad in scope and theme; its subject matter is often a mixture o legend, history, myth, religion and tradition b. The action is grand and in a huge scale, the supernatural element is highly pronounced, the characters are larger than life (god, demi-gods, and highborn mortals) c. The source of conflict involves elemental passions. The events centers on a prodigious struggle or effort to achieve a great purpose or carry out a great task against powerful forces. 2/17/2017 44
  • 45. Characteristics of epic d. The plot consists of numerous episodes and sub- plots people by numerous characters, each with his own adventure and story; but all these are held together by a unifying theme. e. The plot often begins in medias res (in the middle or near the end of the action) and the story is completed by a series of flashbacks. This plot is recounted in the epic poem is often just a portion of a much larger story which is found in the mythology of the nation. f. The style is solemn and majestic in keeping with the grandeur of the subject matter. 2/17/2017 45
  • 46. • Dramatic poetry 1. Dramatic monologue 2. Soliloquy 3. Character sketch 2/17/2017 46
  • 47. Prose • Prose is discourse which uses sentences usually forming paragraphs to express ideas, feelings and actions. In subject matter, prose generally concentrates on the familiar and the ordinary. Prose is mainly concerned with the ordinary, but it may deal with subjects such as heroism, beauty, love and the nobility of spirit which usually find the most eloquent expression in poetry. 2/17/2017 47
  • 48. Distinction between prose and poetry Poetry • Expresses strong emotion or lofty thought in a compressed and intense utterance • Its main purpose is to provide pleasure and delight • It appeals to the emotion and imagination Prose • Is concerned with the presentation of an idea, concept or point of view in a more ordinary and leisurely manner • Its purpose is to furnish information, instruction, or enlightenment • It appeals to the intellect 2/17/2017 48
  • 49. Elements of fiction • Plot • Setting • Characterization • Style • Point of view 2/17/2017 49
  • 50. Divisions of prose • Novel Bases for classification  The novelist’s vision of life a. Romantic fiction b. Realistic fiction c. Naturalistic fiction 2/17/2017 50
  • 51. Writer’s choice of materials a. Historical novel b. Psychological novel c. Social novel  Structure of the novel a. Panoramic novel b. Dramatic novel 2/17/2017 51
  • 52. Point of view • Internal 1. The narrator is himself the protagonist or the most important character 2. The story is told by a minor character who is supposed to be present at the time of the important incidents 3. Composite point of view – the reader is given a comprehensive view of the different aspects of the action and the different angles from which the plot develops 2/17/2017 52
  • 53. • External point of view – also called omniscient point of view 2/17/2017 53
  • 54. Short story • It is an artistic form of prose fiction which is centered on a single main incident and is intended to produce a single dominant impression. • Economy, compression and emphasis characterize the short story. 2/17/2017 54
  • 55. Non-fiction • Essay 1. Formal 2. Informal • Oration • Biography • Autobiography, memoirs, letters and epistles, diaries and journals 2/17/2017 55
  • 56. Drama • Tragedy 1. Serious drama 2. Tragicomedy 3. Melodrama • Comedy 1. farce 2/17/2017 56
  • 57. Styles of drama • The realistic or illusionistic or representational style • The non-realistic or non-illusionistic or presentational style 2/17/2017 57
  • 58. Sources: • Garcia, Carolina U. et al. (1993). A study of literary types and forms. Manila: UST Publishing House. • Sebastian, Evelyn L. and Erlinda A. Cayao. (2006). Readings in world literature. Quezon City; C & E Publishing Inc. • Tan, Arsenia B. (2001). Introduction to literature. Fourth edition. Manila: Academic Publishing Corporation 2/17/2017 58