In literature, however, you’d be right to think that a black cat is bad news. Foreshadowing is a popular literary device used to give an advance hint of what will happen in a story. Well-performed foreshadowing has the power to delight us when the full mystery is uncovered, or it can make a character’s fate all the more tragic.
The meaning of foreshadowing
Foreshadowing is a fictional device, and it is presented either directly or indirectly.
Definition of foreshadowing
Foreshadowing is a narrative technique that hints at a plot outcome.
The literary critic Gary Saul Morson’s explanation helps us visualise foreshadowing:
An object in our path may cast a shadow backward, so that we reach the shadow before reaching the object casting it (Gary Saul Morson, ‘Sideshadowing and Tempics’, 1998).1
Simply put, foreshadowing functions exactly like a shadow: we catch a glimpse of what is to come but not the full picture.
Fig. 1 - Foreshadowing works like a shadow of the future that can be seen in an earlier part of a text.
Types and examples of foreshadowing
There are two main types of foreshadowing, which differ in how subtle the hint is.
Direct (explicit) foreshadowing
In direct foreshadowing, a writer explicitly draws our attention to the foreshadowing. This type can have the effect of directing the reader’s attention away from what will happen to how and why it happens.
The techniques of direct foreshadowing include:
- A revelatory statement: a novel may open with the narrator saying that by the end of the story, a character will die without revealing who, why, or how. A revelatory statement can come from the narrator, for example, in a prologue, or from the dialogue between characters in the story.
- Prophecy: this predicts the future, but the reader has to keep reading to find out if and how the prophecy will come true.
In Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (1999) by J. K. Rowling, Professor Trelawney makes the following prophecy:
The Dark Lord will rise again with his servant’s aid, greater and more terrible than ever before. Tonight … before midnight … the servant … will set out … to rejoin … his master …
(Chapter 16).
At this point in the story, we don’t know that Ron’s pet rat, Scabbers, is actually the servant of whom Trelawney – Peter Pettigrew – in animal form. The prophecy directly foreshadows what will happen, but we keep reading, excited to find out who the servant is and how he will help Voldemort ‘rise again’.
Indirect (implicit) foreshadowing
In indirect foreshadowing, the writer subtly hints at future events without drawing attention to the fact that those hints are intended as foreshadowing.
This often means that the reader is unlikely to pick up on the hints until the foreshadowed event takes place, or maybe the hints are so subtle that readers would have to re-read the story to be able to piece everything together.
The techniques of indirect foreshadowing include:
- Pathetic fallacy: in this, the weather and the natural world foreshadow plot outcomes. For example, a thunderstorm may foreshadow an unpleasant event.
- Symbols and metaphors: these work well as indirect foreshadowing techniques because they are, by their very nature, subtle. Symbols and metaphors are abstract forms of indirect foreshadowing.
- Innocuous details and statements: a reader is likely to disregard these in a story that seems to have no hidden meaning on a first reading.
In The Lord of the Flies (1954) by William Golding, the line ‘After all, we’re not savages’ subtly and ironically foreshadows that the boys will act more and more violent, like ‘savages’, as the novel progresses.
The purpose of foreshadowing
The main purpose of foreshadowing is to engage the reader in a story. Foreshadowing makes a story more well-rounded, creating thematic unity.
Another important purpose of foreshadowing is to add to the mood and meaning of a story.
The functions and effects of foreshadowing
Foreshadowing affects a story’s mood and pathos:
- Mood: foreshadowing can create suspense and a sense of foreboding.
- Pathos: foreshadowing can have a strong emotional effect on readers. The poignancy of the foreshadowed event is heightened by the foreshadowing.
In The Kite Runner (2003) by Khaled Hosseini, the tragic fate of Hassan is made all the more poignant to the reader with the foreshadowing story of ‘Rostam and Sohrab’. As kids, this is Amir and Hassan’s favourite story. It’s about a warrior who kills his enemy in battle, not knowing that he is his brother. Amir lets Hassan be abused by bullies and distances himself from Hassan out of guilt. Amir only learns that Hassan was his half-brother after he has been killed by the Taliban many years later. The story foreshadows Hassan’s fate and makes it all the more poignant and tragic, creating a heightened feeling of injustice.
Irony: foreshadowing can have an ironic effect if characters foreshadow an event by saying with conviction that such an event is unlikely to happen. This creates an ironic, mocking effect.
As we saw earlier, in The Lord of the Flies, the boys’ arrogance about their civilised English identity is mocked through the irony of the foreshadowing statement, ‘After all, we’re not savages’.
Determinism: some uses of foreshadowing implies the inevitability of fate. This makes it somewhat of a fatalistic device. When something is fatalistic, it carries with it the assumption that the future is already decided and that we can’t escape our fates.
The fates of the two lovers in Romeo and Juliet (1597) by William Shakespeare are heavily foreshadowed throughout:
Methinks I see thee now, thou art so low,
As one dead in the bottom of a tomb.
(Act 3, Scene 5).
The differences between foreshadowing and related techniques
Foreshadowing is different from the literary techniques of flashbacks, flashforwards, and red herrings:
A flashforward shows the future, whereas foreshadowing only hints at it.
Famously, in A Christmas Carol (1843) by Charles Dickens, the ‘Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come’ visits Scrooge and shows him what his future will actually be like if he doesn’t stop being such a scrooge.
A flashback shows the past.
In Margaret Atwood’s dystopian novel The Handmaid's Tale (1985), Offred’s narrative often flashes back to her life in the US in the 1980s before it became the ‘Republic of Gilead’.
Foreshadowing and red herrings are also two different things. A red herring is when an author misguides his reader with a false hint. A red herring misdirects the reader into thinking something will happen rather than hinting at something that does happen.
However, we may not know whether something is a red herring or foreshadowing until the full plot has been revealed to us.
In Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (1999) by J. K. Rowling, the reader is led to believe that Sirius Black is a deranged villain who’s out to get Harry, only to find out he had been framed and that the real villain was a wizard-turned-pet-rat.
Foreshadowing - Key takeaways
- Foreshadowing is a popular literary device used to give an advance hint of what will happen in a story.
- There are two types of foreshadowing: direct and indirect foreshadowing.
- The main overarching purpose of foreshadowing is to engage the reader in the story. Foreshadowing makes a story more well-rounded, creating thematic unity.
- Foreshadowing is mainly used to create suspense, pathos, and irony. The technique also has a fatalistic quality, as it can sometimes imply that we can’t escape our fates.
- Examples of foreshadowing can be found across different literary genres, from Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet (1597) and The Lord of the Flies (1954) by William Golding to J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (1999) and Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner (2003).
References
1 Gary Saul Morson, ‘Sideshadowing and Tempics’, New Literary History (Autumn 1998).
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