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flashback The emotional reexperiencing of a traumatic event.
Ãâó: nccanch.acf.hhs.gov/pubs/usermanuals/crisis/crisis...
flashback A segment of film that breaks normal chronological order by shifting directly to time past. Flashback may be subjective (showing the thoughts and memory of a character) or objective (returning to earlier events to show their relationship to the present).
Ãâó: www.psu.edu/dept/inart10_110/inart10/film.html
flashback Moving temporarily backwards in time; a cinematic past tense that soon becomes an ongoing present.
Ãâó: filmstudy.net/glossary.html
flash Flash is an animation format developed by the company Macromedia. One reason for the popularity of Flash is the file sizes are small. Animated, interactive content can be quickly downloaded. However, to be able to view a Flash file the user requires the Flash plug-in.
Ãâó: www.liv.ac.uk/webteam/glossary/
flashback A device that allows the writer to present events that happened before the time of the current narration or the current events in the fiction. Various methods can be used, including memories, dream sequences, stories or narration by characters, or even authorial sovereignty. (That is, the author might simply say, "But back in Tom's youth. . . .") Flashback is useful for exposition, to fill in the reader about a character or place, or about the background to a conflict.
Ãâó: home.cfl.rr.com/eghsap/apterms.html
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