What Is Allegory?

Most of us are familiar with allegory through high school English classes. But if you’re like me, that may have been the last time you even thought about allegory as a storytelling device.

Throughout history, allegory has been used in all forms of art. So what is an allegory? It is a story or tale with two or more levels of meaning: a literal level and one or more symbolic levels. As an extended metaphor, allegory uses symbols to represent characters, places, or events. While allegory uses symbols, it is different from symbolism in that allegory tells a complete story. Allegories are used to share a moral, teach a lesson, or impart a principal.

Plato’s Allegory of the Cave, which is part of his larger work, The Republic, is one of the most famous allegories. In this work, a group of people have been chained up inside a cave for their entire lives. They stare at a blank wall with shadows of the outside world dancing across it. One person escapes the cave and sees the items producing the shadows for the first time. When he goes back into the cave and tries to describe the outside world, the people inside do not believe him. This allegory symbolizes the difficulty a philosopher has expanding the worldview of common man.

The Pilgrim’s Progress by John Bunyan is one of the most important Christian allegories in literature. The names of the characters and places in this work represent character traits of each one. For example, the protagonist, Christian, meets Evangelist, Obstinate, and Pliable on his journey. Christian is from the City of Destruction (the world) and is seeking the Celestial City (heaven).

George Orwell’s Animal Farm is one of the most famous recent examples of allegory. In this work, the farm represents Russia, the practice of Animalism represents Communism, and the animals represent various sectors of Russian society. An example of Communism is found in the following line: “All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.”

What are your favorite stories that are allegories? What do these represent? Do you use allegory in your own work? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!

What Is Adynaton?

Welcome to the new Prestige Prose blog! Now, in addition to a writing prompt each week, we will discuss various forms of literary devices and provide examples. This blog has been a work in progress as we continue to improve our website and add more information useful to authors. If there is a particular literary device or writing style convention that you would like to know about in more detail, let us know in the comments or contact us at prestigeprose@gmail.com.

Have you heard of adynaton? If you’re like me, you may not recognize this term, but you will surely recognize its usage. It is a figure of speech related to hyperbole that emphasizes impossibility or inexpressibility. Who hasn’t used exaggeration for effect, if not in writing then in conversation? The difference between adynaton and exaggeration is that adynaton takes exaggeration to a whole new level: what is proposed simply isn’t possible.

Adynaton often uses a comparison that is contradictory. Common examples of adynaton exist in the English language, and you may even have used some of these yourself. Examples such as “It’s raining cats and dogs” and “She will kill me when she finds out” are popular expressions using adynaton.

Adynaton was widely used in classical literature by ancient Greek playwrights and Roman poets. However, its usage had fallen out of favor by the Middle Ages before experiencing a resurgence among romantic poets. Examples can be found in satirical pieces of literature such as Jonathon Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels, in which the gigantic size of the people represent the worst characteristics of humanity. Another example is found in Macbeth as the king recognizes his guilt in Duncan’s murder: “Will all great Neptune’s ocean wash this blood/Clean from my hand?” One of the most widely known uses of adynaton is found in the words of Jesus in the bible: “Again I tell you, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of God” (Matt. 19:24).

What are some of your favorite (or least favorite) examples of adynaton? Do you use this literary device in your writing or in your speech? Let us know your thoughts in the comment section below!