Unit 1 Short Fiction I: Reading Character, Setting, and Perspective in AP Lit

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25 Terms

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Character (AP Lit)

A crafted set of authorial choices (what a person does, thinks, says, fears, desires, and refuses to admit) used to create meaning and develop the story’s central idea.

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Central idea

A flexible, text-based way to describe what a story is exploring/arguing (similar to theme) built through a character’s actions, limitations, and changes.

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Character development

The process by which an author reveals and shapes a character over the course of a story, often through a few high-leverage moments in short fiction.

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Direct characterization

Characterization in which the text explicitly tells you what someone is like (e.g., labeling a person “generous”); often blunt and potentially unreliable.

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Indirect characterization

Characterization you infer from observable evidence—especially what a character does under pressure—rather than what the text directly states.

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Baseline (development chain)

The initial impression of who the character seems to be or wants others to believe they are before the story’s main pressures intensify.

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Pressure (development chain)

A conflict, demand, temptation, threat, or decision that raises stakes and tests the character’s baseline identity.

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Revealing choice

A decision/action a character makes when maintaining their baseline becomes difficult; it exposes values, motives, or limitations.

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Consequence (development chain)

The outcome of a revealing choice—an external result, internal realization, or changed relationship that shifts meaning.

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Motivation

The desires, fears, obligations, and beliefs that drive a character’s choices; it links plot events to the story’s meaning.

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Mixed motives

When multiple competing forces (desire, fear, social pressure, moral belief, self-image) simultaneously drive a character’s actions.

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Self-deception

The story a character tells themselves to avoid guilt, shame, or difficult truths; often a key engine of motivation and conflict.

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Subtext

What characters mean, feel, or pressure each other to accept beneath their literal words—especially visible in dialogue-heavy scenes.

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Complexity (character)

A character’s layered, conflicting, and limited nature that can’t be reduced to a single trait; includes contradictions and blind spots.

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Self-knowledge limits

A form of complexity where a character doesn’t fully understand themselves, and the story reveals a gap between their self-view and reality.

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Setting (literary analysis)

More than where/when; includes physical environment, historical moment, and social rules that shape what characters can imagine and do.

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Field of constraints and meanings

A way to define setting as an invisible force that establishes what’s normal/dangerous and what characters risk by resisting.

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Time (as setting)

The story’s historical moment, season, time of day, or timing/ritual structure; it shapes expectations, mood, pacing, and inevitability.

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Place (as setting)

Physical environment (geography, architecture, interiors, objects) that can mirror inner states, create obstacles, signal hierarchy, or carry symbolic weight.

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Social environment

Norms and power structures (family duty, gender roles, class, race, religion, workplace authority, community tradition) that pressure choices and outcomes.

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Tone

The story’s attitude (e.g., somber, satirical, tense, nostalgic), often established and intensified through setting and narration.

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Irony (via setting/narration)

Meaning created when the environment or narration suggests one thing while events reveal another (e.g., ordinary daylight intensifying horror).

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Point of view (POV)

The narrative position/“camera angle” that determines how much access readers have to minds and how information is controlled.

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Narratorial distance

How close the narration is to a character’s thoughts and feelings; closeness can build empathy, distance can create critique or irony.

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Unreliable narrator

A narrator whose account can’t be fully trusted due to bias, mistake, instability, naïveté, or self-justification; meaning comes from the gap between what’s said and what readers infer.

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