This presentation does not have any "bells and whistles" as the content does not lend itself to such. It does provide the students with the lit terms they need to know for both the course and the A P exam.
1. Terms which might be useful for
the A.P. Literature Exam
by Kathleen Curran
From Barbara Swovelin’s list
2. Ad hominem argument
From the Latin meaning “to or
against the man,” this is an
argument that appeals to
emotion rather than reason, to
feeling rather than intellect.
36. irony
writer expresses a meaning contradictory
to stated or ostensible one:
Verbal irony: attitude opposite to what
is literally stated.
Dramatic irony: situation understood in
double sense by audience (and not by
characters on stage).
Situational irony: circumstances turn out
to be reverse of those anticipated
41. meter
pattern of stressed and unstressed
syllables; see foot, a foot being the
metrical unit; the following terms refer to
number of feet per line:
monometer, dimeter, trimeter, tetramete
r, pentameter, hexameter, heptameter, o
ctometer. Iambic pentameter refers to a
line of five feet of iambs
61. syllogism
a deductive, logical
argument, formulated around
one major premise, one minor
premise, and a conclusion (e.g.
All men are mortal; Socrates is a
man; therefore, Socrates is
mortal.)
62. symbol
something that stands for
something else, but also exists as
an entity itself (a hammer and
sickle for the USSR)