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  2. Imagery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imagery

    Imagery is visual symbolism, or figurative language that evokes a mental image or other kinds of sense impressions, especially in a literary work, but also in other activities such as. Imagery in literature can also be instrumental in conveying tone .

  3. Picts in literature and popular culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picts_in_literature_and...

    Karen Marie Moning also wrote about the Picts for her third novel of the Highlander Series The Highlander's Touch. Another use of the Picts in a fantasy setting comes in Jacqueline Carey's Kushiel's Legacy fantasy series concerning the Kingdom of Alba and the Picts, and their dealings with Terre D'Ange.

  4. Visual semiotics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_semiotics

    Originating in literary and linguistic contexts, one branch (referred to as semiology) originated from the work of Swiss linguist Ferdinand Saussure. The second branch expands on the work of American pragmatist philosopher Charles Sanders Peirce. A sign can be a word, sound, a touch or visual image.

  5. List of narrative techniques - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_narrative_techniques

    An example is Network. One of the earliest examples is Gulliver's Travels, written by Jonathan Swift. The television program South Park is another. Sensory detail: Sight, sound, taste, touch, smell. The same as imagery. The boot was tough and sinewy between his hard-biting teeth.

  6. Stylistic device - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stylistic_device

    However, imagery may also symbolize important ideas in a story. For example, in Saki's "The Interlopers" , two men engaged in a generational feud become trapped beneath a fallen tree in a storm: "Ulrich von Gradwitz found himself stretched on the ground, one arm numb beneath him and the other held almost as helplessly in a tight tangle of ...

  7. Synaesthesia (rhetorical device) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synaesthesia_(rhetorical...

    It has been suggested that, in the tradition of Romantic poetry, the sensory transfer consisting in the synaesthesic metaphor tends to be from a lower (less differentiated) sense to a higher sense. In this respect, the sequence of senses from low to high is generally taken to be touch, taste, smell, sound, then sight. [4]

  8. Motif (narrative) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motif_(narrative)

    Another example from modern American literature is the green light found in the novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Narratives may include multiple motifs of varying types. In Shakespeare's play Macbeth, he uses a variety of narrative elements to create many different motifs. Imagistic references to blood and water are continually ...

  9. The Seagull (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Seagull_(poem)

    The poem in BL Add. MS 14997, a manuscript dating from c. 1500. The academic critic Huw Meirion Edwards considered that "The Seagull"’s imagery goes far beyond anything that had come before it in Welsh poetry, [7] and Anthony Conran wrote that "pictorially it is superb…[it] has the visual completeness, brilliance and unity of a medieval illumination, a picture from a book of hours". [8]