Philip and A.P. Answer Your Questions About Literary Analysis - Part Two
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- Опубліковано 23 вер 2024
- Of use to readers, reviewers, and authors, this video is part one of answering viewer questions about Literary Analysis and Critical Reading.
Dr. Philip Chase, (@PhilipChaseTheBestofFantasy ) and I share what we’ve learned about analyzing stories over the years. During the series, we will cover various topics, including story versus plot, narrative perspective, characters, setting and world building, symbols, tone and style, and themes. It is our hope that the tools and techniques we discuss will add enjoyment to people’s storytelling journeys and help advance critical reading skills.
This is part two of answering viewer questions... because there were a lot of questions.
If you would like to buy me a coffee or a book, Support me on Ko-Fi: ko-fi.com/crit...
Intro and Music by Professor Trip.
Analysing Stories Series:
01. Introduction: • How to Analyze Stories...
02. Narrative, Story, and Plot: • How to Analyse Stories...
03. Narrators and Narrative Point of View: • How to Analyze Stories...
04. Characters: • How to Analyse Stories...
05. Setting and World Building: • How to Analyze Stories...
06. Symbols and Symbolism • How to Analyse Stories...
07. Style, Tone, Irony, Genre, Audience • How to Analyze Stories...
08. Theme • How to Analyse Stories...
09. Q&A Part One • Philip and A.P. Answer...
10. Q&A Part Two • Philip and A.P. Answer...
11. Q&A Part Three • Finale: Philip and AP ...
More truth bombs, hot takes, and fireballs!!! The world will never be the same!
As long as the tweed remains fireproof, I think you are safe. 😂
@@ACriticalDragon That’s the important thing!
I will miss this series when it's finished! Thanks for the knowledge blitzkrieg!
I dont know which I loved more, your answering my question or the wonderfully dramatic reading of said question! Thank you. This series has been a gem, beginning to end.
I am very pleased that you enjoyed the melodramatic reading. 😁😁
a video discussing diegetic levels with The Spear Cuts Through Water would be very interesting.
Memento I thought was great with it's sequencing. Also I just finished The Broken Empire trilogy and I thought it did a wonderful job with it's... plot (apparently).
15:10 OH MY GOSH I’m working on an analysis video of The Witcher. Thank you Professor Canavan for this example very helpful 😁
I hope it helped. Best of luck with the video.
this is great content. thanks for sharing the discussion fellas!
You are very welcome. I am glad that you enjoyed it.
I’m really looking forward to my aesthetics question!
I am fairly sure we talked about that.
🥳
I hope you enjoy the silliness and the discussion.
@@ACriticalDragon Always do!!
15:05 Witcher name drop 🔥😚
So happy to see other Witcher fans here
So if I'm interpreting Philip's authorial intent correctly, his next novel is going to be about Bob who rules Bananaland which is a fantastical commentary on modern day banana republics. Right?
Philip is Gru? 😂
Dr. Know and his minion, Bob, attempt to steal all the bananas in the kingdom... and split.
@@ACriticalDragon 🤨
In Banana Land there was much peeling of skins.
I don't think Philip is aware of a cartoon called Bananaman...
@@ACriticalDragon Phillip is not Bananaman, never alert to the call to action
Wait, there's another one?!
One more to come.
Random useless annoying thoughts: So if you have something that is from our world as an epigraph in a fantasy book then it is extradiegetic; that makes sense. But if you have something that is from our world as an epigraph in, say, a sci-fi book where earth and presumably the person who wrote that epigraph nominally existed in the world of the story, then in some sense it’s not technically extradiegetic, but there would still be some distinction in our heads between that and an epigraph that does not some from a real historical text, I think partially because one ot these hypothetical texts is, in fact, real, and the other is not. Right?