College Board-Aligned Original Notes
AP English Literature and Composition Unit 6 Topic 3: Understanding nonlinear narrative structures like flashbacks and foreshadowing
Use Understanding nonlinear narrative structures like flashbacks and foreshadowing to strengthen interpretation, communication, argument, and cultural comparison.
What to Know
- Explain how evidence works instead of only quoting or summarizing it.
- Match tone, register, and organization to audience and purpose.
- For world language tasks, connect language choices to culture and context.
- Always connect this topic back to the larger unit: Longer Fiction or Drama II.
Detailed Notes
Understanding nonlinear narrative structures like flashbacks and foreshadowing is about using language or interpretation for a purpose. Ask what the speaker, writer, or text is trying to accomplish and how choices create meaning.
In AP English Literature and Composition, strong work goes beyond summary. You should explain how evidence, structure, tone, style, register, or cultural context affects the message.
For AP tasks, match your response to the situation. Interpretive tasks require careful reading or listening, interpersonal tasks require appropriate exchange, and presentational tasks require organized communication.
Key Vocabulary
Claim
A position or interpretation that can be supported with evidence.
Evidence
Specific support from a text, source, conversation, or cultural example.
Commentary
Explanation of how evidence supports a claim.
Tone
The speaker's or writer's attitude toward a subject or audience.
Audience
The intended readers, listeners, or viewers.
Quick Practice
How would you explain Understanding nonlinear narrative structures like flashbacks and foreshadowing in one or two AP-style sentences?
Name the concept, apply it to a specific example or source, and explain the reasoning that connects the evidence to your answer.
Related Topics in This Unit
- Interpreting foil characters
- Understanding and interpreting character motives
- The effect of narrative tone and bias on reading
- Characters as symbols, metaphors, and archetypes