This is my wish for you:

Comfort on difficult days, smiles when sadness intrudes, rainbows to follow the clouds, laughter to kiss your lips, sunsets to warm your heart, hugs when spirits sag, beauty for your eyes to see, friendships to brighten your being, faith so that you can believe, confidence for when you doubt, courage to know yourself, patience to accept the truth, love to complete your life.

(Author Unknown)



Literature adds to reality, it does not simply describe it. It enriches the necessary competencies that daily life requires and provides; and in this respect, it irrigates the deserts that our lives have already become.

(Author: Clive Staples Lewis)


Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Teaching Literature - Analysis of the poem 'Success is counted sweetest (67)' by Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)


Profa. Dra. Bárbara de Fátima.




A bit about the author:
Born - December 10 - Amherst - Massachusetts.
Died - May 16.
Family:
Grandfather - a leader in founding Amherst College.
Father - a successful lawyer. He became a Member of Congress, and served the College as a trustee. He was ita treasurer. He was a stern and authoritarian moralist. When he spoke his timid wife trembled and was silent.
Hometown: Amherst was a small town and rigid world. The church wielded the highest authority. 
Emily:
- She had a rebellious spirit.
- Her sister-in-law became her confidante.
- In her poems she constructed her own world (of her garden, of the beautiful Connecticut Valley scenery, of the books, e. g. forbidden books, of her private and quite startling thoughts, of her few friends at Amherst Academy, a deeply religious person).
- She visited Washington, Philadelphia, and Boston. 
_ In 1848 she met Ben Newton (He was a brilliant free-thinker, he introduced her to a new world of ideas, but he was too poor to marry).
- In 1854 she met Reverend Charles Wadsworth in Philadelphia (he tried to teach her immortality).
- She spent her middle years as White-clad recluse, but she had contact with the outer world through Helen Hunt Jackson (her girlhood friend) and Thomas Wentworth Higginson (a literary friend of the family).
- Samuel Bowles – Editor of the famous Springfield Republican – only seven of her poems slipped into print during her lifetime.
- From 1884 until her death she was semi-invalid in a condition of a mental decline.
- Posthumous collections – 1890and 1896 – reputation of a powerful eccentric.
- Later collections – 1914 – established her recognition as a major poet – influence upon Young writers.

Her style:

- Simple yet passionate.
- Marked by economy and concentration.
- Discovered the sharps, intense image is the poet’s Best instrument.
- Antecipated the modern enlargement of melody by assonance, dissonance, and ‘off-rhyme’.
- Discoverd the utility of ellipsis of thought and the verbal ambiguity.

Her ideas:

- Witty and rebellious.
- Original.
- On death and immortality.

Her materials:

- Confined her materials to the world of her small village, her domestic cycle, her garden and a few good books.
- Possessed the most acute awareness of sensory experience and psychological actualities.
- Expressed radical discoveries in the áreas with frankness and force.
- Takes liberties with Grammar, punctuation and capitalization.
- was a product of Amherst Village, where colonial America lingered in puritan overtones. She inherited the tradition of the romantic nature poets; but her realism and psychological truth made her seem contemporary to a much later generation.
- Glimpses of her most private thoughts and feelings (what in nature captures her attention; how she responds to beauty, to pain, to death; her special formo f worship and her haith in God).

Her obsessions:

- The problems of Good and Evil.
- Of life and death.
- The nature and destiny of the human soul. 


       Dickinson's poetry reflects her loneliness and the speakers of her poems generally live in a state of want, but her poems are also marked by the intimate recollection of inspirational moments which are decidedly life-giving and suggest the possibility of happiness. Her work was heavily influenced by the Metaphysical poets of seventeenth-century England, as well as her reading of the Book of Revelation and her upbringing in a Puritan New England town which encouraged a Calvinist, orthodox, and conservative approach to Christianity.
       She admired the poetry of Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning, as well as John Keats. Though she was dissuaded from reading the verse of her contemporary Walt Whitman by rumor of its disgracefulness, the two poets are now connected by the distinguished place they hold as the founders of a uniquely American poetic voice. While Dickinson was extremely prolific as a poet and regularly enclosed poems in letters to friends, she was not publicly recognized during her lifetime. The first volume of her work was published posthumously in 1890 and the last in 1955. She died in Amherst in 1886. (Source: poet's.org)


67

by Emily Dickinson


Success is counted sweetest        A
By those who ne'er succeed.         B
To comprehend a nectar              C
Requires sorest need.                  B

Not one of all the purple Host      A
Who took the Flag today             B
Can tell the definition                 C
So clear of Victory                       B

As he defeated - dying -              A
On whose forbidden ear               B
The distant strains of triumph        C   
Burst agonized and clear!             B



This poem was one of the poems to be published in her lifetime. It presents 3 stanzas – 4 verses each stanza- 3 quatrains. Its rhyme scheme is ABCB – the second and the fourth lines of ecah stanza rhyme. It has an extra syllable in the first and third lines. It shows na iambic trimeter (one unaccented syllable followed by one accented).

Point of View:

- It could be a man or a woman, young or old.
- The narrator feels sure that one who has not been victorious can best understand victory (he or she has been on the losing side).
- Might be a dying soldier.


Analysis of each stanza:


First stanza – two statements with similar meaning.

Theme:
- What’s the poem’s primary meaning? The poet’s theme is summarized in the first lines of the poem: success is considered most desirable by those who have never been successful.
- The resto f the poem develops the theme further (to appreciate the good taste of a sweet néctar, one must need to be hungry for it or unfamiliar with it.


Second two stanzas.
- Describe the way in which the victorious soldiers (those Who successfully take the flag are unable to define success;
- Those who have not been successful (those conquered – understand perfectly the nature of victory);
- The poet introduces the Word definition (particularly useful; the entire poem a successful definition of what it means to succeed).
- An expression of the idea of compensation (every evil confers some balancing good; through bitterness we learn to appreciate the sweet).
- The defeated and dying soldier of this poem is compensated by a greater awareness of the meaning of victory than the victorious themselves can.
- He can comprehend the joy of success through its polar contrast to his own despair.
- Emily Dickinson is arguing the superiorityof defeat to victory, of frustration to satisfaction   (a material gain has cost tham a spiritual loss; material loss has led to spiritual gain).
- Its theme is universal, it existis independently of time.
- Its message pertains to all readers.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Teaching Literature - Analysis of the poem "The Tiger" by William Blake (1757-1827)


A bit about the author:
Born: November 28, 1757
London, England
Died: August 12, 1827
London, England
English poet, engraver, and painter

William Blake was an English poet, engraver, and painter. A boldly imaginative rebel in both his thought and his art, he combined poetic and pictorial genius to explore life.

Youth

William Blake was born in London, England, on November 28, 1757, the second son of a mens' clothing merchant. Except for a few years in Sussex, England, his entire life was spent in London. From his earliest years he saw visions. He would see trees full of angels or similar sights. If these were not true mystical visions, they were the result of the artist's intense spiritual understanding of the world. From his early teens Blake wrote poems, often setting them to melodies of his own composition.
At age ten Blake started at the well-known Park's drawing school, and at age fourteen he began a seven-year apprenticeship (studying and practicing under someone skilled) to an engraver. It was as an engraver that Blake earned his living for the rest of his life. After he was twenty-one, Blake studied for a time at the Royal Academy of Arts, but he was unhappy with the instruction and soon left.
In August 1782 Blake married Catherine Boucher, who had fallen in love with him at first sight. He taught her to read and write, and she later became a valued assistant. His "sweet shadow of delight," as Blake called Catherine, was a devoted and loving wife.


The Tiger

                                         by William Blake

Tiger! Tiger! burning bright
In the forests of the night,
What immortal hand or eye
Could frame thy fearful symmetry? 

In what distant deeps or skies
Burnt the fire of thine eyes?
On what wings dare he aspire?
What the hand dare seize the fire? 

And what shoulder, and what art,
Could twist the sinews of thy heart?
And when thy heart began to beat,
What dread hand? and what dread feet? 

 When the stars threw down their spears, 
And watered heaven with their tears,
Did he smile his work to see?
Did he who made the Lamb make thee?

Tiger! Tiger! burning bright 
In the forests of the night,
What immortal hand or eye
Dare frame thy fearful symmetry? 


Type of Work and Year of Publication
 
"The Tiger," originally called "The Tyger," is a lyric poem focusing on the nature of God and his creations. It was published in 1794 in a collection entitled Songs of Experience. Modern anthologies often print "The Tiger" alongside an earlier Blake poem, "The Lamb," published in 1789 in a collection entitled Songs of Innocence.
 
Meter
The poem is in trochaic tetrameter with catalexis at the end of each line. Here is an explanation of these technical terms: 
    Tetrameter Line: a poetry line usually with eight syllables.    
    Trochaic Foot: A pair of syllables-a stressed syllable followed by an unstressed syllable.   
    Catalexis: The absence of a syllable in the final foot in a line. In Blake’s poem, an unstressed syllable is absent in the last foot of each line. Thus, every line has seven syllables, not the conventional eight. 
The following illustration using the first two lines of the poem demonstrates tetrameter with four trochaic feet, the last one catalectic:

    1...........2...............3..................4 
         TIger,..|..TIger,..|..BURN ing..|..BRIGHT..... 
    1..............2...............3...............4 
    IN the..|..FOR ests..|..OF the..|..NIGHT

Notice that the fourth foot in each line eliminates the conventional unstressed syllable (catalexis).  However, this irregularity in the trochaic pattern does not harm the rhythm of the poem. In fact, it may actually enhance it, allowing each line to end with an accented syllable that seems to mimic the beat of the maker’s hammer on the anvil. For a detailed discussion of meter and the various types of feet.





Structure and Rhyme Scheme

The poem consists of six quatrains. (A quatrain is a four-line stanza.) Each quatrain contains two couplets. (A couplet is a pair of rhyming lines). Thus we have a 24-line poem with 12 couplets and 6 stanzas–a neat, balanced package. The question in the final stanza repeats (except for one word, dare) the wording of the first stanza, perhaps suggesting that the question Blake raises will continue to perplex thinkers ad infinitum. 
 
Examples Figures of Speech and Allusions
 
Alliteration: Tiger, tiger, burning bright (line 1);  frame thy fearful symmetry? (line 4)  Metaphor: Comparison of the tiger and his eyes to fire.  
Anaphora: Repetition of what at the beginning of sentences or clauses. Example: What dread hand and what dread feet? / What the hammer? what the chain?
Allusion: Immortal hand or eye: God or Satan  
Allusion: Distant deeps or skies: hell or heaven
 
Symbols
 
The Tiger: Evil (or Satan)  
The Lamb: Goodness (or God)
Distant Deeps: Hell  
Skies: Heaven
 
Themes
 
The Existence of Evil
.......“The Tiger” presents a question that embodies the central theme: Who created the tiger? Was it the kind and loving God who made the lamb? Or was it Satan?  Blake presents his question in Lines 3 and 4:
    What immortal hand or eye  Could frame thy fearful symmetry?
Blake realizes, of course, that God made all the creatures on earth. However, to express his bewilderment that the God who created the gentle lamb also created the terrifying tiger, he includes Satan as a possible creator while raising his rhetorical questions, notably the one he asks in Lines 5 and 6: 

    In what distant deeps or skies Burnt the fire of thy eyes?
Deeps appears to refer to hell and skies to heaven. In either case, there would be fire--the fire of hell or the fire of the stars.
.......Of course, there can be no gainsaying that the tiger symbolizes evil, or the incarnation of evil, and that the lamb (Line 20) represents goodness, or Christ. Blake's inquiry is a variation on an old philosophical and theological question: Why does evil exist in a universe created and ruled by a benevolent God?  Blake provides no answer. His mission is to reflect reality in arresting images. A poet’s first purpose, after all, is to present the world and its denizens in language that stimulates the aesthetic sense; he is not to exhort or moralize. Nevertheless, the poem does stir the reader to deep thought. Here is the tiger, fierce and brutal in its quest for sustenance; there is the lamb, meek and gentle in its quest for survival. Is it possible that the same God who made the lamb also made the tiger? Or was the tiger the devil's work?

The Awe and Mystery of Creation and the Creator

The poem is more about the creator of the tiger than it is about the tiger intself. In contemplating the terrible ferocity and awesome symmetry of the tiger, the speaker is at a loss to explain how the same God who made the lamb could make the tiger. Hence, this theme: humans are incapable of fully understanding the mind of God and the mystery of his handiwork. 

 Summary of the Stanzas
 
1 Tiger, tiger, burning bright In the forests of the night, 
What immortal hand or eye 
Could frame thy fearful symmetry? 
 
Stanza 1 Summary
What immortal being created this terrifying creature which, with its perfect proportions (symmetry), is an awesome killing machine? 


2
In what distant deeps or skies 
Burnt the fire of thine eyes? 
On what wings dare he aspire? 
What the hand dare seize the fire?
 
Stanza 2 Summary
Was it created in hell (distant deeps) or in heaven (skies)? If the creator had wings, how could he get so close to the fire in which the tiger was created? How could he work with so blazing a fire?


3
And what shoulder and what art 
Could twist the sinews of thy heart? 
And when thy heart began to beat, 
What dread hand and what dread feet? 
 
Stanza 3 Summary
What strength (shoulder) and craftsmanship (art) could make the tiger's heart? What being could then stand before it (feet) and shape it further (hand)?


4What the hammer? what the chain? 
In what furnace was thy brain? 
What the anvil? What dread grasp 
Dare its deadly terrors clasp? 
 
Stanza 4 Summary
What kind of tool (hammer) did he use to fashion the tiger in the forge fire? What about the chain connected to the pedal which the maker used to pump the bellows? What of the heat in the furnace and the anvil on which the maker hammered out his creation? How did the maker muster the courage to grasp the tiger? 


5
When the stars threw down their spears, 
And water'd heaven with their tears, 
Did He smile His work to see? 
Did He who made the lamb make thee? 
 
Stanza 5 Summary
When the stars cast their light on the new being and the clouds cried, was the maker pleased with his creation?


6
Tiger, tiger, burning bright 
In the forests of the night, 
What immortal hand or eye 
Dare frame thy fearful symmetry?
 
Stanza 6 Summary
The poet repeats the the central question of the poem, stated in Stanza 1. However, he changes could (Line 4) to dare (Line 24). This is a significant change, for the poet is no longer asking who had the capability of creating the tiger but who dared to create so frightful a creature.

(Source: Guides2.com) 

Teaching Literature - Poetry

How to talk about a Poem

Learning how to talk about poetry and being able to interpret what poems mean is not the easiest thing in the world to do. When discussing a poem two areas must be considered: meaning and mechanics.

First, consider the meaning of the poem.
1. Paraphrase all the portions of the poem.
2. Precis the poem, either line by line or stanza by stanza.
3. Is there symbolism used in the poem? (If there is symbolism, understanding it is the key to understanding the poem.)
4. Is the poem lyric or narrative?

To paraphrase the poem:
1. Look at the title. What significance does the title have in connection with the meaning of the poem?
2. Read the poem as a whole.
3. Read the poem stanza by stanza (if appropriate.)
4. Paraphrase the poem line by line.
5. Break the lines down word by word if necessary. Substitue familiar words with ones you use every day.

Helpful Hints!
1.  Consider punctuation – a period signals the end of a thought, no matter where it is located in a line.
2.  Rewrite sentences in the usual word order if the sentences are arranged in an unfamiliar word order. 


Second, consider the mechanics of the poem.
a. Is the poem traditional with rhyme and rhythm? Or is the poem free verse with no set rhythm pattern or rhyme scheme?
b. How is the poem organized? Does the shape of the poem have anything to do with the meaning?
c. What poetic devices are used? (These listed are most common.)


Simile – A figure of speech that compares two unlike things, using the words like or as.
Metaphor – A figure of speech that compares two unlike things directly, without the use of an intervening word.
Alliteration – The repitition of consonant sounds at the beginning of the words.
Assonance – The repition of vowel sounds in stressed syllables.
Personification – The assigning of human qualities to nonhuman things.
Onomatopoeia – The use of words to initiate sounds. Ex--WHIZZ
Consonance – The repetition of consonant sounds in stressed syllables.
Apostrophe – The poet directly address an absent person or object or idea.
a.       What is the tone of the author?
b.      What mood does the poem create?
Definitions:
Paraphrase – Restatement in different/other words.
Precis – Concise Summary.
Symbolism –  The use of an object to represent an idea.
Lyric – Poems with a song like quality that are usually short. Poet expresses his personal reaction to things.
Narrative – Poems that tell a story and are usually long. An example would be an epic or a ballad.
Mood – The overall feeling a poem awakens in the reader.
Tone  – The writer's attitude torwards his/her work. 

(Source: cswnet.com)

Teaching Literature - Types of Literature


When I read great literature, great drama, 
speeches, or sermons, 
I feel that the human mind has not 
achieved anything greater 
than the ability to share feelings and 
thoughts through language. 
(Autor: James Earl Jones)


Kinds of Literature

Fictional Literature:
Drama: Drama is the theatrical dialogue performed on stage, it consists of 5 acts. Tragedy, comedy and melodrama are the sub types of drama. e.g William Shakespeare, an Elizabethan dramatist composed the plays Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet, King Lear that are famous because of its combination of tragedy and comedy. Problem play, farce, fantasy, monologue and comedy of manners are some kinds of drama.

Tragedy: It is a story of the major character who faces bad luck. Tragedy, elements of horrors and struggle usually concludes with the death of a person. The Illiad and The Odyssey by Homer are the two famous Greek tragedies.

Comedy: The lead character overcomes the conflicts and overall look of the comedy is full of laughter and the issues are handled very lightly.

The elements used in the comedy are romanticism, exaggeration, surprises and a comic view of life.

Melodrama: Melodrama is a blend of two nouns - ‘melody’ and ‘drama’. It is a musical play most popular by 1840. Uncle Tom’s Cabin is one of the most popular plays describing cruelty of labor life. It has happy ending like comedy.

Tragicomedy: The play that begins with serious mode but has a happy ending is tragicomedy.

Prose Literature:
History, journalism, philosophy, fiction and fantasy writings, scientific writings, children's literature authors and writers are included in Prose Literature.

Myth:
Myths are the fairy tales with lots of adventure, magic and it lacks scientific proof. Nursery rhymes, songs and lullabies are forms of myths that strike the interest of children. Creative and nature myth are stories of the stars and moon. Magic tales are wonderful tales of quests and fantasy. Hero myths are ideal heroes of adventure.

Short story:
The small commercial fiction, true or imaginary, smaller than a novel is known as short story. Short stories are well grouped into easy beginning, concrete theme, some dialogs and ends with resolution. They are oral and short-lived which have gossip, joke, fable, myth, parable, hearsay and legend.

Novel:
Novel can be based on comic, crime, detective, adventurous, romantic or political story divided into many parts.

The major kinds of novels are:

Allegory: The symbolical story revolves around two meanings. What the writer says directly is totally different than the conveyed meanings at the end. Political and Historical allegory are two forms of Allegory.

Comedy: Satire is very common form in comedy novels and tries to focus on the facts of the society and their desires.

Epistolary: The collection of letters or mails is the epistolary novels. Samuel Richardson’s Pamela and Henry Fielding’s Joseph Andrew are the few examples of Epistolary novels.
 
Feminist: These types of novels are written by women writers around the world to describe the place of women in a male dominated society. E.g Virginia Woolf’s "A Room of one’s Own",

Gothic: Gothic fiction is the combination of both horror and romance. Melodrama and parody were grouped in the Gothic literature in its early stages.

Ironic: Ironical novels are known for excessive use of narrative technique. It is satire on the contemporary society about cultural, social and political issues.

Realism: The realistic novels are based on the truths of ordinary society and their problems. It focuses on the plot, structure and the characters of the novel.

Romance: Love and relationship topics are handled optimistically in the romantic novels. It originated in western countries; basically the story revolves around love affairs of main characters. Some popular sub categories of romantic novels are paranormal, erotic, suspense, multicultural and inspirational romance.

Narration: In narrative style, writer becomes the third person who narrates whole story around the characters.

Naturalism: Naturalism is based on the theory of Darwin.

Picaresque: It is opposite to romance novels as it involves ideals, themes and principles that refuse the so-called prejudices of the society.

Psychological: It’s the psychological prospective of mind with a resolution.

Satire: Satirical novels criticise the contemporary society. The most famous novels are Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels (1726), Kingsley Amis’s Lucky Jim (1954), George Orwell's Animal Farm and Randell

Jarrell’s Pictures from an Institution (1954).

Stream of Consciousness: James Joyce's stream of consciousness is all about the thought coming up in the minds of the readers.

A novel also constitutes categories on social and political aspects like proletarian, psychological, protest novel, government, didactic, materialist novel, allegorical novel, novel of engagement, naturalistic novel, Marxist novel, radical novel, revolutionary novel, anti-war novel, utopian novel, futuristic novel, anarchist novel, problem novel, social philosophy novel, novel of ideas, problem play and speculative novel.

Folk Tale:
Folk Tales are traditional stories that have been creating interest since ancient times. The children and old persons like religious story, magic and superstition as well. Fable, tall tales, cumulative, trickster and proverbs are the sub categories of folk tales. Mythology or legend is the ancient religious stories of origin and human civilization such as story of Robin Hood.

Types of poetry:
Poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings recollected in the tranquility. Greek poetry is found in free verse and we have rhymes in the Persian poem. Are you wondering how to write a poem, here are the followings forms of poem?

Sonnet: Sonnet is the short poem of 14 lines grouped into Shakespearean and Italian sonnets.

Ballad: The poems that are on the subject matter of love and sung by the poet or group of singers as telling readers a story.

Elegy: This type of poem is the lamenting of the death of a person or his near one. Elegy Written in Country Churchyard by Thomas Gray is one of the famous poems marked as sad poems of the ages.

Ode: Ode is the formal and long poem serious in nature.

Allegory: Allegory is the famous form of poetry and is loved by the readers because of its two symbolical meanings. One is the literal meaning and another is the deep meaning.

Epic and Mock epic: Epics are the narrative poems that convey moral and culture of that period. The Odyssey and Iliad are one of the largest philosophical epics written by Samuel Butler. Rape of the Lock is the great mock epic focusing on the minor incident of cutting of a curl.

Lyric: It has Greek origin that gives a melody of imagery. It is the direct appeal of a poet to the readers about any incident or historical events. Lyrics are most of the times similar to ode or sonnets in the form.

Nonfiction Literature:
Nonfiction Literature is opposite to fiction as it is informative and comprises the interesting facts with analysis and illustrations.

Main types of Non- fiction literature:

Autobiography and Biography:
An autobiography is the story of the author’s own life. 'Family Life at the White House' by Bill Clinton is focused on his life and achievements. ‘Wings of fire’ by Dr. A. P. J. Abdul Kalam, 'Mein kampf' of Adolph Hitler are the autobiography books on real life.

Essay:
Generally the authors’ point of view about any particular topic in a detailed way is an essay. Essay has simple way of narrating the main subject; therefore they are descriptive, lengthy, subject oriented and comparative.

Different types of essay: Personal essay, expository essay type, response essay, process essay, persuasive essay, argumentative essay, critical essay type, interview essay, reflective essay type, evaluation, observation essay, comparison type of essay, application essay, compare and contrast essay and narrative essay type.

Literary criticism:
It is the critical study of a piece of literature. Here critics apply different theories, evaluation, discussion and explanation to the text or an essay to give total judgments. Plato, Aristotle, T.S.Eliot, Saussure and Frye are some of the famous critics.

Travel literature:
It is the narration of any tour or foreign journey with the description of the events, dates, places, sights and author’s views. Francis Bacon’s natural philosophies is one famous example of such kind from the middle of Seventeenth century.

Diary:
Diaries are the incidents recorded by the author without any means of publishing them. It is the rough work of one's daily routine, happenings, memorable days or events in their life. E.g. Anne Frank’s 'Diary of a Young Girl' was published by her father in 1940’s; it's a story of a girl trapped during German invade Amsterdam.

Diaries consists of business letters, newsletters, weather listing. In today’s world of Internet, writers write in blogs, forums, polls and social networking sites to convey their thoughts. This also is a form of diary writing. Some profound forms of diaries are online diary, travel, sleep, tagebuch, fictional, dream and death diaries.

Journal:
Journal is one of types of diaries that records infinite information. They are of following types:

Personal: It is for personal analysis. In this journal one can write his goal, daily thoughts, events and situations.

Academic: It is for students who do research or dissertation on particular subjects.

Creative: Creative journals are the imaginative writing of a story, poem or narrative.

Trade: Trade journals are used by industrial purposes where they dictate practical information.

Dialectical: This journal is use by students to write on double column notebook. They can write facts, experiments, and observation on the left side and right side can be a series of thoughts and response with an end.

Newspaper:
It is a collection of daily or weekly news of politics, sports, leisure, fashion, movies and business.

Magazine:
Magazines can be the current affairs or opinions well collected covering various content.

Frame Narrative:
The psychoanalysis of human mind is present in a frame narrative. Here we find another story within the main story. Some of the popular narratives are Pegasus, Wuthering Heights, The Flying Horse, The Three Pigs, A Time to keep and the Tasha Tudor Book of Holidays.

Outdoor literature:
Outdoor literature is the literature of adventure that gives whole exploration of an event. Exciting moments of life such as horse riding, fishing, trekking can be a part of literature. Some outdoor books are ‘The Adventures of Tom Sawyer’ by Mark Twain, ‘Treasure Island’ by Robert Louis, ‘Voyages’ by Richard Hakluyt and ‘A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush’ by Eric Newby.

Narrative form of Literature:
Today we find movies, audio and video CD’s and Cassettes that present current literature in use. Digital poetry is an upcoming trend too. Comic books, cartoons, ebook, and Internet games are the learning methods for children.

Literature includes centuries, human nature, cultures and souls. Isn’t it? 

By Vaishali Satwase