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Models of analysis in English (Comics (Panels, Style, https…
Models of analysis in English
Images
#
Colors
Lighting
Fiction
Theme
Thematic concept
Is the broder topic, fx. judgement, love, revenge, forgiveness
Thematic Statement
Is the particular argument, fx. human judgement is imperfekt, love cannot be bought ect.
Characterization
Direct characterization
The author desciribes directly a character's qualities
Indirect characterization
The author shows the character as he or she moves throught he world
Round characters: are complex, realistic, unique characters
Flat characters: limited personality, one-dimensional characters
Is the representation of the traits, motives, and psychology of a character in a narrative
Plot structure
Is a sequence of interconnected events within the story. Reveals the cause-and-effect relationships between the events that occur.
Freytag's Pyramid
Exposition: the first section of the plit
The rising action: begins with the inciting incident or compolication
The climax: the story's central turning point
the falling action: ending with the resolution
Denouement/ outcome: the plot ties up loose ends and reveals the final consequences.,
Setting
The scene or the sense of place. There can be lots of scenes
Fictional
Non-fictional
Aspects of setting
The phsyical location: realities of where the story takes place
Time: when does the story takes place
The social mileu: Aboiut the social world, ts the setting wealthy or poor?
Change: setting can also be affected by how it changes
The function os setting in literature
Refelct or emphasize certain character trails belonging to people who inhabit certain settings
Give psyical form to a them that runs throughout the narrative
Indicate the social and economic statuses of their caracters, as well as how those characters do or not do conform to those statuses
Create a source of pressure or stress that causes characters to act in certain way
Point of view
Refers to the perspective that the narrator holds in relation to the events of the story
First person: "I went...."
Told from the narrators perspective
The narrator can be or not be the protagonist
Second person: "You went."
Most rarely used, because it does not allow the narrator as much freedom
Third person: "He went..."
Most common pov in writing, as it gives the narrator lots os freddom
Omniscient POV: the narrator know all the thoughts and feelings of every character
Limited POV: the narrator does not have omniscient
Alternating POV, it can switch, between different characters
Conflicts
Internal
Human vs self
External
HUman vs human
Human vs nature
Human vs society
Non-fiction
Stylistics
Sentence structure (sætningsstruktur)
Passiv voice (passiv konstruktioner)
Complex sentences (hypotakse)
Simple sentences (paraktase)
Choice of words (ordvalg)
Language functions (sporgfunktioner)
Directiv
informativ
expressiv
Stylistic devices (stilistiske virkemidler)/figures and trophes
Alliteration
assonance
conosonance
personfication
smilie
Metaphore
Imagery
Olfactory (smell)
Visual (sight)
Audiitory (hearing)
Gustatory (taste)
Tactile (touch)
Rhetoric
Forms of appeal
Ethos
Pathos
Logos
Retorical triangle
Rhetroical situation
Speaker
Audience
Message
Rhetrocial devices
Argumentation
Claims
Evidence
Comics
Panels
Style
https://padletuploads.blob.core.windows.net/prod/20477140/2f4be1ad7122d59c50c3538671d66082/Analyzing_Comcs___Graphic_Novels.pdf
Narration
Time
Graphic weight
Transition
Gutter