Foreshadowing: Difference between revisions

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The presentation of information given by the laying out of hints or clues in a story, movie, or play to prepare the reader for later events. Foreshadowing can result from the establishment of a mood or atmosphere, as in the opening of Conrad’s “Heart of Darkness” (Harmon 219). It can result in a tragedy, just as it did in the beginning of Greene’s “Across the Bridge”: the story states that Mr. Calloway’s story is a tragedy, which foreshadows the end of the story. Also foreshadowing can be in the revelations of character that appear in expositions of Flannery O’Connor’s “A Good Man is Hard to Find” (Carey 51).
The presentation of information given by the laying out of hints or clues in a story, movie, or play to prepare the reader for later events. Foreshadowing can result from the establishment of a mood or atmosphere, as in the opening of Conrad’s ''Heart of Darkness'' (Harmon 219). It can result in a tragedy, just as it did in the beginning of Greene’s “Across the Bridge”: the story states that Mr. Calloway’s story is tragic, which foreshadows the end of the story. Also foreshadowing can be in the revelations of character that appear in expositions of Flannery O’Connor’s “A Good Man is Hard to Find” (Carey 51).


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