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Allusion
An expression designed to call something to mind without mentioning it explicitly
Eg: “What costume, Bo Peep?” (an abduction)
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Analepsis
A past event is narrated at a point later than its chronological place in a story
Flashback in silk brocade or under the sign of the moon
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Characterisation
The creation or construction of a fictional character
Eg: “Edith was thirty-four and lively, and not bad looking” (deeds not words)
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Foreshadowing
Be a warning or indication of (a future event)
Eg: “She said she was heading inside to find her Jokari set” (an abduction)
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Imagery
Visually descriptive or figurative language
Eg: “The wings of her spirit, which had been beginning to soar, faltered and flung her to earth, because, after all, she had been doing her best, nothing else…” (an abduction)
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Intertextuality
The relationship between texts, especially literary ones
Eg: “In the real book she loved, Swallows and Amazons…” (bad dreams)
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Irony
The expression of one's meaning by using language that normally signifies the opposite
Eg: “People seemed to take me more seriously – as if I’d been initiated into something after all, although nothing had happened.” (experience)
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Metaphor
A figure of speech in which a word or phrase is applied to an object or action to which it is not literally applicable
Eg: “But you could shed your skin over and over.” (flight)
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Motif
A dominant or recurring idea
Eg: Books/Swallows and Amazons (bad dreams)
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Personification
The attribution of a personal nature or human characteristics to something non-human
Eg: “The moon sank below the wall.” (bad dreams)
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Prolepsis
Future act of development is presented as If already accomplished
Eg: “Jane Allsop was abducted when she was fifteen, and nobody noticed.” (an abduction)
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Simile
A figure of speech involving the comparison of one thing with another thing of a different kind
Eg: “Her freckles startling as the camouflage of an animal.” (an abduction)
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Symbolism
The use of symbols to represent ideas or qualities
Eg: “Fresh sunlight” (represents the fresh knowledge of discovering Fiona and Daniel) (an abduction)
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Unnamed characters
Unnamed characters, perhaps suggesting a lack of personal identity / agency e.g. ‘the child’ and ‘the child’s mother’ in ‘Bad Dreams,’ ‘Carrie’s mother’ in ‘One Saturday Morning’
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Juxtaposition
Protagonists often paralleled / juxtaposed with other women e.g. Jane & Fiona (‘An Abduction’), Laura & Hana (‘Experience’), Marina & Wendy (‘The Stain’), Claire & Susan (‘Flight’)
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Lack of punctuation
Hadley’s dialogue is presented without quotation marks, instead introduced by dashes. This gives it an air of distance (as if it’s being indirectly reported to the reader)
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Parentheses
- Hadley also makes use of asides (parentheses) to comment on a character or scene, reminding readers of the observational nature of the stories (again creating distance, preventing the reader from strong emotional engagement)
- e.g. Jane in ‘An Abduction’ is described in parentheses as not being ‘clever or literary’ and as ‘nervous of new words’
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