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How to write a literary analysis: The ultimate guide

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Writing a literary analysis can be easy and fun. This ultimate guide contains all you need to know to write literary analysis essays that rock.

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Page 1: How to write a literary analysis: The ultimate guide

With Love from Overnightessay.comSave bucks on writing help! 15% Off on Any PaperDiscount code: ‘dianeclark15’

Page 2: How to write a literary analysis: The ultimate guide

Writing a literary analysis is fun. Simply read a literary piece. Then reread it again and again to evaluate the author's job. Write down what you’ve noticed. That's it.

This guide will make it as easy as it sounds.

Page 3: How to write a literary analysis: The ultimate guide

The first step is to become a critical reader. That is a reader who X-rays what s/he’s reading. To achieve that goal, you might answer the

following questions:

Page 4: How to write a literary analysis: The ultimate guide

1)What are the main characters, events, mood and/or plot lines?

2) What's your personal first reaction? 3) What are the authors’ main ideas and

philosophical messages? 4) What are the techniques used by the author?

Page 5: How to write a literary analysis: The ultimate guide

Check the literary piece for the following techniques:

• Back story - a story preceding the main plot line which adds meaning to it.• Chekhov’s gun - an irrelevant item that appears right from the start for a

purpose which becomes clear only much later.• Flashbacks - an alteration of time sequence in narration.• Frame story (a story within a story) - a main story which helps organize smaller

stories.• Plot twist - an unexpected turn in narration which changes the meaning of the

whole plot.• Stream of consciousness - a narration based on associations and memories.• An unreliable narrator - a story is told by someone who clearly has biased

views.

Page 6: How to write a literary analysis: The ultimate guide

• Allegory - a symbolic story. • Hyperbole - a literary exaggeration. • Oxymoron - a combination of words which mean each other's

opposite: terribly beautiful.• Parody - a humorous imitation of another author’s style.• Irony - a discrepancy between the expectations and events.• Onomatopoeia - the use of words imitating sounds (ding-dong,

bang, clap).• Metaphor - a direct shift of meaning from one word to another

one, without using the comparison words ‘like’ or ‘as’.• Simile - a milder form of a metaphor, a comparison using

words 'as' or 'like'.

Page 7: How to write a literary analysis: The ultimate guide

When you've already mastered the art of critical reading, it’s high time to write a literary analysis introduction. The main components to include:

• the title and the author’s name;• genre and context;• a strong thesis statement, expressing your attitude and

position.

If you want to include an attention hook, you might also add a quote from the text, a joke or a rhetorical question.

Page 8: How to write a literary analysis: The ultimate guide

The main body usually consists of at least three paragraphs. Good literary analysis essays require detailed explanation of your position and much evidence from the text for defending it.

E.g. Shakespeare said: “I always feel happy. You know why? Because I don’t expect anything from anyone! Expectations hurt…”

Page 9: How to write a literary analysis: The ultimate guide

The textual evidence can include: • specific details from the text;• direct quotes from the text;• brief summary;• paraphrase.

Page 10: How to write a literary analysis: The ultimate guide

The proven formula for each paragraph of the main body is ‘a hamburger paragraph’, consisting of

- a topic sentence (expressing the main point),- explanatory details (supporting and developing

the main point) - and a concluding sentence (restating the main

point in different words).

Page 11: How to write a literary analysis: The ultimate guide

All you need for writing a literary analysis conclusion is getting back to your introduction, finding your thesis statement (it’s usually at the end of the introduction) and repeating it in different words as something that has already been proved.

Page 12: How to write a literary analysis: The ultimate guide

• When writing your literary analysis, you may want to use some (or even all) of the following phrases: the fate of the main characters illustrates….

• the imagery demonstrates the ambiguity of relationships…;

• a character analysis reveals…• through this internal dialogue, the author was

trying to show…

Page 13: How to write a literary analysis: The ultimate guide

In case you still need help with writing a literary analysis or any other assignment type, feel free to contact our service or simply drop me a line a:

[email protected]

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