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Literary Forms & Schemas—ExamplesHere, The Muse is pleased to present examples of specific literary forms in the context of a sample schema of literary forms. Forms and schemas—overviewAs cited elsewhere, a form is the organization, arrangement, or framework of a literary work. A form is also a distinctive class or category of literary composition that possesses a particular kind of structure. A work's form is one way to describe and classify it, compare it with works of the same or similar structure, and distinguish it from works with different structures. A subform is a subclass of a form. It is a subclass by virtue of the fact that its structure is simpler than its class, shares some of the same components or characteristics, or is more limited in scope or narrower. A subform is a structure that is a special or restricted case of the structure of a form. For example, Fiction is a subform of Prose and Novel is a subform of Fiction. Novels, Novellas, Short Stories, and works of Graphic Fiction are all subforms of Fiction and each is a form in its own right. Because a form is always broader in scope than any of its subforms, forms have a hierarchical relationship to their subforms. As with any such hierarchical scheme, this broader/narrower relationship between a form and its subform can be displayed as a tree structure, network, or outline. In a typical form classification scheme, each form is arranged as a hierarchical outline in which a subform (subclass) is represented as a special case of a form (class). In the case where the hierarchical structure is an outline:
The subform is a special case of the form above it. All subforms listed under a particular form have a substructure and composition style of the their form, but each subform listed under a particular form has a narrower structure or composition style than its form. Each subform under a given form is distinguished from the other subgforms under the same form by virtue of the fact that it has a narrower structure or composition style that is different from the other subgforms under the same form. how Form schemas work—exampleHere is a sample list of a few literary forms and subforms arranged in an indented list called a schema. This list has been compiled by The Muse Of Literature to help clarify your understanding of The Muse's concept of a literary form, subform, and literary form schema. Sample schema showing relationship between literary forms and subforms
contents, hierarchical structure, and interpretationA form is the organization, arrangement, or framework of a literary work; the manner or style of constructing, arranging, and coordinating the parts of a composition for a pleasing or effective result. The list shown above is an example of a form schema arranged as a hierarchical outline. The bulleted entries in this list are the names of literary forms and subforms. Each form name is followed by the title of a literary work that is a representative sample of the form. Each indented form on the list is a subform (subclass) of the form under which it is indented. Except at the top-most or bottom-most bullet of any sequence of forms and subforms, any particular form serves as a subform to the form above it and also as a form to the subform beneath it. For example, Fiction is a subform of Prose and Novel is a subform of Fiction. Novels, Novellas, Short Stories, and works of Graphic Fiction are all subforms of Fiction and each is a form in its own right. The kind of structure and style that define a subform are a special case of the kind of structure and style that define the form above it. For example, Novel is a fictional prose narrative of considerable length and complexity in which the actions, speech, and thoughts of the characters serve to unfold the plot. All subforms listed under a particular form draw on the structure or style of their form; but each subform listed under a particular form has a simpler structure or style than its form. For example, Nonfiction is the branch of literature comprising works of narrative prose dealing with or offering opinions or conjectures upon facts and reality. Essay is a short, nonfiction narrative work of prose literature that is analytic, speculative, or interpretive in nature, dealing with or offering opinions or conjectures upon facts and reality, and written from the author’s point of view. Essay is a particular kind of Nonfiction, one that narrows the scope of Nonfiction by being analytic, speculative, or interpretive in nature, dealing with or offering opinions or conjectures upon facts and reality, and by being written from the author’s point of viewn. Each subform under a given form is distinguished from the other subgforms listed under the same form by virtue of the fact that it has a structure and style that is different from the other subforms listed under the same form. For example, Journalism is a nonfiction presentation of facts describing news events written to be published by the media; Essay is a short, nonfiction narrative work of prose that is analytic, or offers opinions or conjectures upon facts and reality, and is written from the author’s point of view.
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