1 Overview of Literature and Its Characteristics
1 Overview of Literature and Its Characteristics
Definition
being life itself. It is an oral or written record of man’s thoughts, feelings and aspirations
which has stood the test of time because of its universal appeal.
Utilitarian Artistic/Aesthetic
factual fanciful
objective subjective
Prose. All forms of written or spoken expression that are consciously organized and that
lack rhythmic patterns; it implies logical order, continuity of thought and individual style.
Poetry. An arrangement of lines in which form and content fuse to suggest meanings
beyond the literal meanings of the words; the language of poetry is more compressed
and also more musical. Poetry has rhyme, meter and rhythm.
➢ Rhyme - Words rhyme when the sound of their accented vowels and all
Standards/Merits:
Artistry/Style – has to do with beauty & forcefulness in the weaving of words, with how all
Intellectual value – the capacity to stimulate or stir the mind, to make others think
Permanence – the timelessness & the timeliness; its relevance today as when it was
written.
Suggestiveness – the capacity to uplift the emotions; to soothe the cares of man.
Spiritual value – the capacity to inspire lofty thoughts, especially about the
divine/godly/spiritual
Universality –the truth and meaning that transcend time & space, religion, age and creed
THE LITERARY GENRES
POETRY
Epic - the longest form of narrative poetry; tells about the exploits/adventures and heroic
Examples:
Literary Folk
Metrical Romance – a long rambling story which embodies the ideals of the medieval
times (age of chivalry); talks about the lives and adventures of the nobility, of chivalry and
knighthood.
Example: King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table (Thomas Malory)
Metrical Tale – a long narrative poem which tells of the lives of ordinary people; has
element of realism.
a supernatural element, but simpler than the epic, metrical romance and metrical tale.
Tragedy – has a sad ending; main character often meets death; has a somber or serious
tone.
Ode – a monodrama where the author is the actor himself who shares an unforgettable
Example: Annabel Lee (Edgar Allan Poe), Ode to the West Wind (Percy Bysshe Shelley)
(Thomas Gray)
story behind.
Idyll – a poem of rural or pastoral feeling; expresses sentiment for his immediate
surroundings.
PROSE
Short story – a narrative told by a known author with characters, setting, plot and theme.
Novel – an extended form of a short story; with several settings and more characters,
Myth – prose narratives which are considered to be sacred and true in societies where
they are told; embodiment of dogma or religious doctrines; set in the remote past (when
the world was young and not as it is today) Legends – prose narratives considered to be
true in societies where they originated and thrived; situated in the distant past (when the
metaphor).
Fables – characters are animals; expressed the follies of man without directly attacking
them.
Essay – a literary exposition expressing the author’s views or ideas about a subject;
Point of View –1st person, 2nd person, 3rd person, omniscient, multiple
Conflict – internal/psychological (man vs. himself); social (man vs. man, man vs. society,
Theme
Language
Movement - though quite similar to a trend, develops in a larger scale and for a longer
period than a trend; it is of greater magnitude than the trend because it practically affects
➢ There was unrestrained enjoyment so the maxim was: “let us drink the cup of life
to the lees”
➢ Focuses on a setting that is far, distant, magical, mystical, imaginative and exotic,
➢ Characters are of heroic proportions, often larger than life; hero usually comes
➢ Has supernatural elements; villains are the exact opposite of the hero
➢ Plot focuses on adventure; displays cosmic struggle between good and evil; there
is also the struggle of an individual against the society, its norms and its laws, but
the individual triumphs because the story has to have a happy ending (if a tragedy,
➢ Age of reason
➢ Setting is in contemporary Paris during the 17th century; current, new and familiar
➢ Plot did not patronize adventures; revolved around a social problem; there is also
the cosmic struggle between good and evil’ the society. Its norms and its laws
➢ Language is refined and polished; prefers the expression of truth in a most refined
Trends
individuality and imagination Romantic writers abandoned the witty and measured
couplet and concerned themselves with the primitive, the bizarre, the irregular and
the unique
Realism
➢ Pervading sentiment: “Life goes on. Man may not be perfect but definitely has
Naturalism
➢ Man is pictured as a weakling who cannot rise above the forces of fate, heredity
and environment
Symbolism
➢ Shortest-lived trend because it didn’t have much in terms of tenets; writers used
personalized symbols
Imagism
➢ Does not necessarily carry a thought/theme, but focuses on hard, vivid images
➢ Lack of theme did not allow it to stand the test of time dadaism
Impressionism
➢ Purpose is to know how internal qualities affect his perception of the reality
Existentialism
➢ It says: man is born into a hostile and purposeless universe and that he must
oppress the cruelty of his environment through the exercise of his freewill. His
choice determines his act and his act determines his essence.
Absurdism
➢ Strives to express the senselessness of the human condition and the inadequacy
thoughts.
Experimental theatre
➢ Aesop (Fables)
➢ Demosthenes (Oratory)
- tragedy
➢ Aristophanes ( “The Frogs,” comedy)
➢ Seneca (Tragedy)
➢ Late middle – literary epic (“Divine Comedy” by Dante), Metrical Tales (“The
➢ Spain
➢ Reply to the Shepherd” by William Raleigh, “Song to Celia” by Ben Johnson, etc)
➢ Rise of the baroque literature, a trend which was an excess of romanticism; very
6. 17th Century
➢ In Spain, the Age of Reason – revival of the arts of the Greeks and the Romans
➢ Shelley (“Ode to the West Wind”), John Keats (“Ode on a Grecian Urn”), Samuel
➢ France, Victor Hugo (“Les Miserables”, “Phantom of the Opera,” “The Hunchback
of Notre Dame”)
11. Naturalism – Ernest Hemingway (“For Whom the Bell Tolls”), Flaubert (“Madame
Symbolism – Rimbaud
20th century – rise of the anti-art crazes
Allusion. Reference to a historical or literary person, place or event with which the reader
is assumed to be familiar.
Consonance. The repetition of consonant sounds within and at the ends of words, as in
Couplet. Two consecutive lines of poetry that end with rhyming words.
Drama. Literature that develops plot and characters through dialogues and actions;
Dramatic monologue. A lyric poem in which the speaker addresses a silent listener in a
Epigram. A short poem notable for its conciseness, balance, wit and clarity.
Epistle. A formal literary letter addressed to a specific person but intended for a wide
audience.
Fiction. Imaginative works of prose, including the novel and the short story.
Foreshadowing. A writer’s use of hints or clues to indicate events that will occur later in
a narrative.
Free verse. Poetry written without regular patterns of rhyme and meter.
Romance. Any imaginative narrative concerned with noble heroes, gallant love, chivalry
or daring deeds.
Satire. A combination of critical attitude with wit and humor for the purpose of improving
society.
Tone. The attitude that a writer takes toward his subject matter.
Understatement. Creating emphasis by saying less than is actually or literally true, ex.
ZEUS (JUPITER)- the supreme ruler; the Lord of the sky, the rain-god and the cloud-
gatherer; his breastplate was the aegis; his bird was the eagle; the oak was his tree; his
HERA (JUNO) – Zeus’s wife and sister; she was the protector of marriage; the cow and
POSEIDON (NEPTUNE) – the ruler of the sea; Zeus’s brother and second to him in
eminence; he was commonly called ‘the earth-shaker” and was always shown carrying
HADES (PLUTO) – the third brother among the Olympians, who drew for his share the
underworld and the rule over the dead. He was god of wealth, of the precious metals
PALLA ATHENA (MINERVA) – the daughter of Zeus and his favorite child; she was
battle goddess; she was also the embodiment of wisdom, reason and purity. Argos was
her favorite city; the olive was her tree and the owl her bird.
PHOEBUS APOLLO- “the most Greek of all the gods;” the master musician; the God of
Light and Truth; the sun-god; the laurel was his tree.
ARTEMIS (DIANA)- Apollo’s twin sister; one of the three maiden goddesses of Olympus
(Aphrodite, Athena & Artemis); the Lady of the wild things; As Apollo was the sun, she
the myrtle was her tree; the dove her bird, sometimes the sparrow and the swan. She is
the wife of Hephaestus (Vulcan), the lame and ugly god of the forge.
HERMES (MERCURY) –he was Zeus’s messenger; also, the solemn guide of the dead.
ARES (MARS) – THE God of War0; son of Zeus and Hera; his bird was the vulture.
HEPHAESTUS 9VULCAN AND MULCIBER) – the God of fire, the son of Hera; he was
HESTIA (VESTA) - the goddess of the hearth, the symbol of the home.
“Box of Ashes and Other Stories,” first collection of short stories in book form, ZM Galang,
1925
“The Distance to Andromeda and Other Stories”, by Gregorio Brilliantes, 1960 , portrayed
individual anxieties
“The Butcher, The Baker, The Candlestick maker,” by Gilda Cordero Fernando, 1962,
“The Day the Dancers Came,” by Bienvenido Santos, 1907, vividly portrayed a man’s
Heritage Award for Literature “Literature and Society” by Salvador P. Lopez; as a writer,
“Footnote to Youth” by Jose Garcia Villa; he stressed art for art’s sake
“Like the Molave”, a poem by Rafael Zulueta Da Costa, describe the qualities of the
Filipino people
Regained
Mariner
Churchyard
Dream
Dame
Hollow