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Irony A contrast, sometimes funny, between what is stated and what is meant; the contrast between what appears to be true and what really is true; or the.

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Presentation on theme: "Irony A contrast, sometimes funny, between what is stated and what is meant; the contrast between what appears to be true and what really is true; or the."— Presentation transcript:

1 Irony A contrast, sometimes funny, between what is stated and what is meant; the contrast between what appears to be true and what really is true; or the contrast between the expected outcome and what actually occurs. Example: A fire station burns down.

2 Three Main Types of Irony Dramatic – the reader knows what will happen BEFORE the character does (or the characters do). Example: Antigone – When Creon asks “What man has dared to do this?” we (the audience) know that it was Antigone, but he does not. WATCH THIS! Even more examples

3 Three Main Types of Irony Situational – the reader/audience and characters realize the irony at the SAME time. Example – Duncan Goldwater flushes not only his perceived enemies but himself at the end of “Flushie.” WATCH THIS! More examples

4 Three Main Types of Irony Verbal – A difference between what is said and what is meant—sarcasm, overstatement, or understatement. Example: A large man whose nickname is “Tiny”. WATCH THIS!

5 “Lamb to the Slaughter” Read carefully. ON YOUR OWN PAPER, thoughtfully answer the questions in margin. DO NOT WRITE ON STORY!!!! Refer to “Tone/Mood” words on screen as needed. Upon completion of the story, come to me to see the final tasks you must complete.


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