Judith Literary Elements

Judith Literary Elements

Genre

Medieval Poetry

Setting and Context

The setting is in Biblical times in Israel as the Israelites are threatened by the Assyrian army

Narrator and Point of View

Third person narrator telling the story with a bias towards Judith

Tone and Mood

Inspirational and war-like, threatening and dangerous

Protagonist and Antagonist

Judith is the protagonist, the Assyrians are the antagonists

Major Conflict

The major conflict is between the Hebrew army led by Judith and the invading Assyrian force

Climax

Judith inspires her army to great valor and to victory by parading

Foreshadowing

Judith's prediction that she is about to be seduced by Holofernes comes true and this foreshadows his demise at her hands

Understatement

Judith is described as courageous which is an understatement as she is the most valiant warrior her army has ever been led by

Allusions

The poem alludes frequently to earlier Old Testament characters

Imagery

The imagery shows Judith as an emissary of God since although she is a bloodthirsty killer for her country and her King she believes that she is doing what God wants her to do and in this way she is shown as a messenger of God

Paradox

At the same time she is said to be a warrior and brace soldier of unmatched courage and a nurturing woman with no equal.

Parallelism

There is a parallel between the situation of Israel being invaded by the Assyrians and the invasion of Anglo saxon la SS by the Vikings at the time of the writing of the poem

Metonymy and Synecdoche

The Assyrians actually represents Holofernes as he is the key player and the leader of the nation

Personification

There are no major examples of personification in the poem

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