Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Learning Outcome: By the end of this unit, learners should be able to demonstrate knowledge and appreciation of literature, identify literary forms, genres, elements, devices, and interpret unseen texts.
Literature refers to written or spoken works that express ideas, emotions, or stories, often with aesthetic or artistic value.
It includes imaginative, creative, and intellectual works that reflect human experience and culture.
Key Points:
Literature is not only for entertainment but also for education, moral guidance, and cultural preservation.
It can be oral (spoken) or written.
Oral Tradition:
Literature passed down by word of mouth, often before writing systems existed.
Includes folk tales, myths, legends, proverbs, riddles, and epic songs.
Common in African culture, where storytelling preserves history and moral values.
Example:
Ananse stories from Ghana teach wisdom and moral lessons.
The Epic of Sundiata from Mali tells the history of the founding of the Mali Empire.
Written Tradition:
Literature recorded in books, manuscripts, or digital form.
Preserves ideas and stories for future generations.
Example:
Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet (English literature).
Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart (African literature).
Key Differences:
| Feature | Oral Tradition | Written Tradition |
|---|---|---|
| Medium | Spoken word | Written text |
| Transmission | Memory, storytelling | Printed/digital form |
| Flexibility | Can change over time | Fixed once recorded |
| Audience | Community | Individuals or groups |
African Literature:
Often reflects community, oral culture, tradition, and values.
Themes: morality, ancestry, colonialism, identity.
Forms: folktales, proverbs, poetry, drama, novels.
Example: Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe (novel); Songs of Sorrow by Kofi Awoonor (poetry).
English Literature:
Originates from England, spans centuries from Beowulf (Anglo-Saxon) to modern novels and poetry.
Themes: human nature, society, love, tragedy, humor.
Forms: drama, poetry, prose (novels, essays, short stories).
Example: Macbeth by William Shakespeare (drama); Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen (novel).
Learning Outcome:
Students can explain what literature is, distinguish oral from written traditions, and describe the scope of African and English literature.
Prose is ordinary written or spoken language without structured meter or rhyme.
Used in novels, short stories, essays.
Key features: paragraphs, complete sentences, narrative style.
Example:
Chinua Achebe, Things Fall Apart (novel)
Edgar Allan Poe, The Tell-Tale Heart (short story)
Poetry is literature using rhythmic and figurative language to evoke emotion or imagery.
Features include rhyme, rhythm, metaphor, and symbolism.
Example:
William Wordsworth, I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud
Kofi Awoonor, Songs of Sorrow
Drama is literature written to be performed on stage.
Includes dialogue, stage directions, and character actions.
Often divided into acts and scenes.
Example:
Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet
Ama Ata Aidoo, The Dilemma of a Ghost
Long fictional prose narrative with complex characters and plots.
Explores themes such as society, morality, love, and conflict.
Example:
Things Fall Apart – explores colonialism and Igbo traditions.
Brief narrative focused on a single incident or character.
Often contains a moral or lesson.
Example:
The Tell-Tale Heart by Edgar Allan Poe
Poetry expressing personal emotions or thoughts.
Usually short, melodic, and rhythmic.
Example:
William Wordsworth, Daffodils
Tragedy: Serious play with a sad or disastrous ending.
Example: Macbeth – ambition leads to downfall.
Comedy: Play intended to amuse or entertain, often ending happily.
Example: A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Learning Outcome:
Students can identify forms and genres of literature and distinguish sub-genres.
The sequence of events in a story:
Introduction → Rising action → Climax → Falling action → Resolution
Example: Things Fall Apart – Okonkwo rises to prominence → conflict with colonial forces → tragic downfall.
Individuals in the story, can be:
Protagonist (main character)
Antagonist (opposing force)
Dynamic (changes) or Static (unchanged)
Time and place of the story.
Example: Things Fall Apart – 1890s, Igbo village in Nigeria.
Central message or idea.
Example: Conflict between tradition and change (Things Fall Apart).
Repetition of similar sounds at the end of lines.
Example:
“I wandered lonely as a cloud
That floats on high o’er vales and hills”
Pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables.
Example: Iambic pentameter in Shakespeare.
Descriptive language appealing to the senses.
Example: “Golden daffodils fluttering in the breeze” – visual imagery.
Conversations between characters.
Reveals personality, conflict, and plot development.
Instructions for actors, e.g., movement, tone, emotion.
Example: [Exeunt left] or [angrily]
Division of play for organization and pacing.
Act = major part; Scene = smaller unit within an act.
Learning Outcome:
Identify elements of prose, poetry, and drama for analysis and discussion.
Comparison using “like” or “as”.
Example: “He was as brave as a lion.”
Direct comparison without “like” or “as”.
Example: “Time is a thief.”
Giving human qualities to non-human things.
Example: “The wind whispered through the trees.”
Contrast between expectation and reality.
Example: Saying “What a pleasant day!” during a storm.
Using objects, characters, or actions to represent abstract ideas.
Example: In Things Fall Apart, fire symbolizes destruction and change.
Understanding meaning, themes, and messages of unseen texts.
Identify characters, plot, setting, tone, and moral lessons.
Analyze literary style, devices, and effectiveness.
Example:
Question: What imagery is used to describe the setting?
Answer: The author uses visual imagery like “golden daffodils” to create a peaceful atmosphere.
Learning Outcome:
Identify literary devices.
Appreciate and analyze unseen prose and poetry using literary terms.