Adventures in the Print Trade: Figuration narrative.
Figurative language refers to the color we use to amplify our writing. It takes an ordinary statement and dresses it up in an evocative frock. It gently alludes to something without directly stating it. Figurative language is a way to engage your readers, guiding them through your writing with a more creative tone.
New Wave (French: La Nouvelle Vague) is a French art film movement which emerged in the late 1950s. The movement was characterized by its rejection of the era's traditional filmmaking conventions in favor of experimentation and a spirit of iconoclasm. New Wave filmmakers explored new approaches to editing, visual style, and narrative, as well as engagement with the social and political.
Figurative language, also called a figure of speech, is a word or phrase that departs from literal language to express comparison, add emphasis or clarity, or make the writing more interesting with the addition of color or freshness.
Paul Ricoeur and Narrative Identity. For Ricoeur this retrospective figuration of events into a meaningful unity occurs from the end-point of the story (the present moment, for the individual.
In regard to black writing and its use of such ancestral modes as the slave narrative, Oxherding Tale accordingly calls for a sort of Creative re-appropriation, an archaeological method, that will lay bare the full range of its accumulated meaning(s): the influence of that “hoary confession by the first philosophical black writer: Saint Augustine”, the Puritan Narrative, the nineteenth.
Essay. From the 1880s until the First World War, western Europe and the United States witnessed the development of Art Nouveau (“New Art”). Taking inspiration from the unruly aspects of the natural world, Art Nouveau influenced art and architecture especially in the applied arts, graphic work, and illustration.Sinuous lines and “whiplash” curves were derived, in part, from botanical.
Novelle definition, a tale or short story of the type contained in the Decameron of Boccaccio. See more.