Little Leaders: Bold Women in Black History Literary Elements

Little Leaders: Bold Women in Black History Literary Elements

Genre

History/Children's

Setting and Context

Various, depending on the person being covered (for actress Nichelle Nichols, it covers her life from 1932 until now)

Narrator and Point of View

Told from a third person point of view

Tone and Mood

Solemn, Sad, Violent, Uplifting, Fun, High-Energy, Child-Friendly, and Academic

Protagonist and Antagonist

Each of the subjects covered in the book are the protagonists; the people, things, or circumstances they face is the antagonist.

Major Conflict

The conflicts between each of the people covered in the book (Oprah Winfrey, for example) and the people, things, or situations that had to contend with

Climax

This is a non-fiction book and has no discernible climax

Foreshadowing

Not applicable - this is a non-fiction book which doesn't use foreshadowing

Understatement

The tremendous literary value of Phillis Wheatley's work was understated in her story

Allusions

Primarily to the history of the United States and the famous people therein, the geography of the United States (and the world), film, television (Star Trek, which Nichelle Nichols starred in, for example), and popular culture.

Imagery

Each story uses relatively simple language and doesn't use imagery

Paradox

This book is for children, yet includes some very dense material and weighty themes

Parallelism

The story of many of these black women - Nichelle Nichols and Oprah, who both revolutionized the entertainment industry - are paralleled.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

Traveler for Sojourner

Personification

In Sojourner Truth's story, the Emancipation Proclamation is personified.

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