American Women writers after World War II


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Bog'liq
The second world War in American literature

Flashback - Flashback is a device that moves an audience from the present moment in a chronological narrative to a scene in the past.
Fantasy - Fantasy, from the Greek ϕαντασία meaning ‘making visible,’ is a genre of fiction that concentrates on imaginary elements (the fantastic). This can mean magic, the supernatural, alternate worlds, superheroes, monsters, fairies, magical creatures, mythological heroes—essentially, anything that an author can imagine outside of reality.
Horror - In literature, horror is a genre of fiction whose purpose is to create feelings of fear, dread, repulsion, and terror in the audience—in other words, it develops an atmosphere of horror.
Parody - A parody is a work that’s created by imitating an existing original work in order to make fun of or comment on an aspect of the original.
Narrative - A narrative is a story. The term can be used as a noun or an adjective. As a noun, narrative refers to the story being told. As an adjective, it describes the form or style of the story being told.
Monologue - A monologue is a speech given by a single character in a story.
Plot - In a narrative or creative writing, a plot is the sequence of events that make up a story, whether it”s told, written, filmed, or sung. The plot is the story, and more specifically, how the story develops, unfolds, and moves in time.
Poetry - Poetry is a type of literature based on the interplay of words and rhythm. It often employs rhyme and meter (a set of rules governing the number and arrangement of syllables in each line). In poetry, words are strung together to form sounds, images, and ideas that might be too complex or abstract to describe directly.
REFERENCES
1. Abcarian R. Klotz M and Richardson P. Literature. St. Martin’s Press New York. (1998)
2. A Good Man Is Hard To Find, and Other Stories, 1955 (published in England as The Artificial Nigger)
3. Beauty J., Booth A., Hunter J. P and Mays K.J., The Norton introduction to literature. W.W. Norton and Company LTD. London (2002)
4. Bogoslovskiy B. N American Literature. Moscow. High School. (1991)
5. Canning S., Ensley P. Enjoying Literature. Macmillan. New York. (1987)
6. Carlsen G..R., Tovatt A and P. Focus. Themes in Literature. (1975)
7. Cliffs E. Literature. Prentice – Hall, Inc. New Jersey. (1994)
8. Dean Curry, General Series Editor (1995) High Lights of American Literature. U.S. Inform. Agency Washington D.C.
9. Elliott E et al., ed., Columbia Literary History of the United States (1988) and The C in a Culture of Creative Destruction (1999);
10. Emerson E.H, ed., Major Writers of Early American Literature (1972);
11. Klein M , Foreigners: The Making of American Literature 1900-1940 (1981)
12. Lewis, American Literature: The Makers and the Making (1973);
13. G. Marcus and W. Sollors, ed., A New Literary History of America (2009);
14. Mc Closkey M.L., Stack L Voices in Literature. Heinle and Heinle Publishers. Boston. Massachusetts. (1996)
15. O'Connor, Flannery. The Habit of Being. Ed. Sally Fitzgerald. New York: Farrar, 1979: p. 90.

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