Language Arts: AP Literature: Analyzing Prose Fiction
Close reading of narration, style, characterization, and theme
Close reading of narration, style, characterization, and theme
Language Arts - Grade 9-12
- 1
Read the passage: "Mara placed the unopened letter beneath the flour tin, where no one would think to look. She told herself she had forgotten it by supper, though each scrape of a chair sounded to her like paper being torn." Identify the narrative point of view and explain how it shapes the reader's understanding of Mara.
- 2
In the sentence "The parlor was polished, severe, and bright enough to make every visitor aware of a stain," analyze how diction contributes to characterization or setting.
- 3
Read the sentence: "Because the road dipped, vanished, and returned through the fog, Elias kept walking, not from courage, he later admitted, but because turning back would have required deciding." Explain how the syntax reveals Elias's state of mind.
- 4
Read the passage: "The kitchen smelled of scorched milk and wet wool. Rain worried the windowpanes, and the kettle ticked without boiling." Identify two sensory details and explain the mood they create.
- 5
Read the passage: "Whenever Mr. Vale praised generosity, he counted the spoons before his guests left." What kind of characterization is used, and what does it reveal about Mr. Vale?
- 6
Read the passage: "At noon, the schoolyard lay empty except for a single red mitten frozen to the fence." Explain how setting may function symbolically in this moment.
- 7
Read the passage: "Clara kept the brass key on a ribbon around her neck, although the locked room had been empty for years." Analyze the possible symbolic meaning of the key.
- 8
Read the passage: "The mayor called the town meeting to celebrate honesty, then asked that the missing ballot box not be mentioned." Identify the irony and explain its effect.
- 9
A story begins with an elderly woman refusing to enter a train station. The next section flashes back to her childhood, when she watched her brother leave from that same station and never return. Explain how this structure affects meaning.
- 10
Read the passage: "For years, Daniel thought the orchard was endless. That autumn, from the hill, he saw its square borders and the road beyond it." Explain the shift in perspective and its possible thematic significance.
- 11
Read the dialogue: "'You look well,' Aunt Livia said, touching the untouched teacup. 'So do you,' Nora answered, though her aunt's hand trembled against the saucer." Explain what the dialogue and gestures suggest beneath the surface.
- 12
Read the passage: "Of course Julia had no desire to impress them. She had only changed her dress twice, practiced her laugh in the mirror, and arrived precisely seven minutes late." Explain how the narration creates complexity in Julia's character.
- 13
Read the passage: "The battle lasted three pages in his memory, but only one sentence in his account: 'We crossed the field, and then we did not speak of it.' Analyze the effect of pacing in this description.
- 14
Write a defensible thesis for this prompt: In the passage, a young artist returns to her hometown and sees that her childhood mural has been painted over. Analyze how the writer uses literary elements to portray the artist's response to change.
- 15
Read the evidence: "She smiled at the new wallpaper, then pressed her palm to the place where the old crack had been." Write two sentences of commentary explaining how this evidence could support an analysis of conflict.
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