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ILLUSTRATED NOVEL

• Story through text and illustrated images


• 50% of the narrative is presented without
words
• The reader must interpret the images to CHICK LIT or CHICK LITERATURE
comprehend the story completely. • Is genre fiction which addresses issues of
• Textual portions are presented in traditional modern womanhood, often
form. humorously and lightheartedly.
• Some illustrated novels may contain no text at • Chick Lit typically features a female protagonist
all. whose femininity is heavily thermalizing in the
• Span all genres. plot.
• Examples include The Invention of Hugo Cabret by • Scarlet Bailey’s The night before Christmas and
Brian Selznick and The Arrival by Shaun Tan. Miranda Dickinson’s It started with a Kiss are
examples of this.

DIGI-FICTION
• Triple Media Literature FLASH FICTION
• Combines three media: book, movie/video and • Is a style of fictional literature of extreme
internet website. To get the full story, students brevity
must engage in navigation, reading, and viewing • There is no widely accepted definition of the
in all three forms. length and category. It
• Patrick Carman’s Skeleton Creek and Anthony could range from word to a thousand.
Zuiker’s Level 26 are examples.

SIX-WORD FLASH FICTION


GRAPHIC NOVEL • Ernest Hemingway: For sale: baby socks, never
• Narrative in comic book formats worn.
• Narrative work in which the story is conveyed • Margaret Atwood: Longed for him. Got him,
to the reader using a comic form. Shit.
• The term is employed in broadly manner,
encompassing non-fiction works and
thematically linked short stories as well as BLOG
fictional stories across a number of genres. • A weblog, a website containing short articles
• Archie Comics by John Goldwater and called posts that are changed regularly.
illustrator, Bob Montana, is a good example. • Some blogs are written by one person
containing his or her own opinions, interests
and experiences, while others are written by
MANGA different people.
• Japanese word for comics
• It is used in the English-speaking world as a
generic term for all comic books and graphic CREATIVE NON-FICTION
novels originally published in Japan. • Also known as literary non-fiction or narrative
• Considered as an artistic and storytelling style. non-fiction
• Ameri-manga- sometimes used to refer to • A genre of writing that uses literary styles and
comics created by American artists in manga techniques to create factually accurate
style. narratives.
• Shonen- Boy’s Manga (Naruto, Bleach, One Piece) • Contrasts with other non-fiction, such as
• Shojo- Girl’s Manga (Sailormoon) technical writing or journalism, which is also
• Seinen- Men’s Manga (Akira) rooted in accurate fact, but is not primarily
• Josei- Women’s Manga (Loveless, Paradise Kiss) written in service to its craft.
• Kodomo- Children’s Manga (Doraemon, Hello • As a genre, creative non-fiction is still relatively
Kitty) young and is only
beginning to be scrutinized with the same
critical analysis given to fiction and poetry.
DOODLE FICTION • 1000 Gifts by Ann Voscamp and Wind, Sand, and
• Literary presentation where the author Stars by Antoine de Saint-Exupery are examples.
Incorporates doodle writing,
drawings and handwritten graphics in place of
the traditional font. SCIENCE FICTION
• Drawing enhances the story, often adding • Is a genre of speculative fiction dealing with
humorous elements imaginative concepts such as futuristic science
• Examples include The Diary of a Wimpy Kid by and technology, space travel, time travel, faster
Jeff Kinney and Timmy Failure by Stephan Pastis. than light travel, a parallel universe and extra-
terrestrial life.
• Often explores the potential consequences of
TEXT-TALK NOVELS scientific and other innovations and has been
• Blogs, email and IM format narratives called a “literature of ideas”.
• Stories told almost entirely in dialogue • Examples include Suzanne Collins’ Mockingjay
simulating social network exchanges. and Sarah Maas’ Kingdom of Ash.
HYPER POETRY
• Digital poetry that uses links and hypertext
mark-up
• It can either involved set words, phrases, lines,
etc. that are presented in variable order but sit
on the page much as traditional poetry does, or
it can contain parts of the poem that move and
transform.
• It is usually found online, through CD-ROM
and diskette versions exist. The earliest
examples date to no later than the mid-1980’s.

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