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1. Meaning of Literature
Literature is written or spoken works of artistic merit that express ideas, emotions, or tell stories.
It reflects human experiences, thoughts, values, and culture.
It is not just for entertainment; it can educate, inform, or persuade.
Examples:
Novel: Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
Poem: The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost
Teacher Note: Emphasize that literature includes fiction, non-fiction, poetry, drama, essays, and speeches.
2. Functions of Literature
Educational: Teaches morals, values, and cultural norms.
Example: Folktales like Ananse stories teach wisdom and morality.
Entertainment: Engages readers through stories, poems, or drama.
Example: Novels like Harry Potter entertain while providing lessons.
Informative: Provides insight into history, society, and culture.
Example: Historical novels such as A Grain of Wheat show societal struggles.
Aesthetic: Offers beauty in language, style, and expression.
Persuasive/Social Commentary: Encourages reflection or social change.
Example: Things Fall Apart critiques colonialism in Africa.
Teacher Tip: Ask students to identify examples from Ghanaian literature to make it relevant.
1. Prose
Written or spoken language in ordinary form (not poetry).
Includes novels, short stories, essays, biographies, and articles.
Focuses on characters, plot, setting, and themes.
Example Sentence:
“In Things Fall Apart, Achebe tells a story of Okonkwo’s life and the effects of colonialism.”
2. Poetry
Literature written in verse, often using rhythm, rhyme, imagery, and figurative language.
Expresses emotion, imagination, or ideas in a condensed form.
Example:
“The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep.” – Robert Frost
Teacher Tip: Show students how poems compress meaning, unlike prose.
3. Drama
Literature meant to be performed on stage.
Includes dialogue, acts, scenes, and stage directions.
Can be tragedy, comedy, or historical.
Example:
Death and the King’s Horseman by Wole Soyinka
Focuses on characters and their actions, not just narration.
1. Plot
The sequence of events in a story (beginning, middle, end).
Elements include exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution.
Example: In Things Fall Apart:
Exposition: Introduction of Okonkwo and his village.
Rising Action: Conflicts with colonial forces.
Climax: Okonkwo kills himself.
Resolution: Village changes under colonial influence.
2. Character
The people or beings in a story.
Types:
Protagonist: Main character (Okonkwo)
Antagonist: Opposes protagonist (Colonial influence)
Dynamic: Changes during story
Static: Remains the same
3. Setting
Time and place of a story.
Can include social conditions, weather, or cultural context.
Example:
Setting of The Dilemma of a Ghost – Ghana, early 20th century; explores tradition vs Western influence.
4. Theme
The central idea or message.
Often about life, morality, society, or human nature.
Example:
Theme of Things Fall Apart: Clash of tradition vs change.
5. Point of View
Perspective from which a story is told.
First-person: “I walked…”
Third-person limited: Focuses on one character
Third-person omniscient: Narrator knows all thoughts
1. Rhyme
Repetition of similar sounds at the end of lines.
Types: end rhyme, internal rhyme, slant rhyme
Example:
“The cat sat on the mat.” (end rhyme)
2. Rhythm
Pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables.
Gives poetry a musical quality.
3. Imagery
Words that appeal to the senses.
Visual, auditory, tactile, olfactory, gustatory imagery.
Example:
“The golden sun dipped below the horizon, painting the sky in crimson.”
4. Sound Devices
Techniques like alliteration, assonance, onomatopoeia, consonance.
Enhance musicality and mood.
1. Acts and Scenes
Acts: Major divisions in a play
Scenes: Subdivisions within acts
2. Dialogue
Spoken words between characters.
Reveals personality, conflict, and plot development
3. Stage Directions
Instructions for actors: movement, tone, and expression
Often in italics or brackets
Example:
[Okonkwo walks to the window and sighs deeply.]
1. Metaphor
Compares two unlike things without ‘like’ or ‘as’
Example: “Time is a thief.”
2. Simile
Compares two things using ‘like’ or ‘as’
Example: “Her smile was like sunshine.”
3. Personification
Giving human traits to non-human things
Example: “The wind whispered through the trees.”
4. Irony
When words convey the opposite of literal meaning or unexpected outcomes.
Example: A fire station burns down.
5. Symbolism
Using objects or actions to represent ideas
Example: A dove symbolizes peace.
1. Unseen Prose Passages
Reading comprehension with interpretation, inference, and analysis
2. Unseen Poems
Analyze meaning, devices, and theme
3. Interpretation and Meaning
Focus on writer’s intention, message, and emotional impact
GTLE Focus:
Identify devices
Explain meaning of expressions
Appreciation and critical analysis