Fates and Furies Literary Elements

Fates and Furies Literary Elements

Genre

A novel

Setting and Context

The majority of events in the story takes place in New York. Time period is 1970s-2000s.

Narrator and Point of View

The story is told from the third-person point of view by an omniscient narrator. The first part of the novel is about Lotto while the second part is about Mathilde.

Tone and Mood

The narrator’s tone varies between thoughtful and ironic. The mood is moving, unsettling.

Protagonist and Antagonist

Lotto and Mathilde are protagonists of the novel. Lott’s narcissism and Mathilde’s secrecy are the antagonists of the story.

Major Conflict

The major conflict is person vs. self. The characters have to fight with their inner demons.

Climax

Lotto’s death is the climax of the story.

Foreshadowing

What a name! You’ll be beat up for sure!

Understatement

Who’s this? Bridget with the spaniel’s face, oh dear, clutching him. They’d hooked up, what, two times? [Eight.]
Lotto manages to forget a girl with whom he has slept eight times.

Allusions

The novel alludes to legends about King Arthur and His Knights of the Round Table.

Imagery

see the imagery section

Paradox

The paradox of being a mermaid: the lazier she looks, the harder the mermaid works.
Women who screwed deserved the scorn they got. Lotto was doing what men do. They didn’t make up the rules.
The paradox is that there are no rules. Lotto’s roommates praise his ability to charm women and despise women for allowing Lotto to charm them.

Parallelism

Global warming, schmobal schwarming.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

The building emptied out, front doors locked. (The building is synecdoche that denotes people who had been in the building and then left.)
Beside the girl was a fat boy with glasses and a sly expression, the girl’s twin. (Glasses are metonymy that denotes specs.)

Personification

The seabirds stopped their turning, the ocean went mute.

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