---
title: "Allegory — AP Lit Definition, Examples & Exam Guide"
description: "Allegory is a narrative where characters, settings, and events carry a second, symbolic meaning (often moral or political). Key for AP Lit Topic 8.4 on symbols."
canonical: "https://fiveable.me/ap-lit/key-terms/allegory"
type: "key-term"
subject: "AP English Literature"
unit: "Unit 8"
---

# Allegory — AP Lit Definition, Examples & Exam Guide

## Definition

An allegory is a story in which the literal narrative maps onto a second layer of meaning, usually moral, political, or philosophical, so that characters, settings, and events function as sustained symbols. On the AP Lit exam, it falls under Topic 8.4 (symbols, conceits, and allusions).

## What It Is

An allegory is a work where the surface story is really two stories at once. The characters, settings, and [plot](/ap-lit/unit-1/narrator-perspective-short-fiction/study-guide/X1gB63ee9piXJdVjAdyh "fv-autolink") events all stand for something beyond themselves, and those symbolic meanings stay consistent from start to finish. Think of it as symbolism running the whole show. A single symbol is one charged object (a rose, a wall, a green light). An allegory is what happens when an entire narrative is built out of those symbolic correspondences, usually to deliver a moral, political, or religious message.

In [AP Lit](/ap-lit "fv-autolink") terms, allegory lives in Topic 8.4 alongside symbols, conceits, and allusions, because reading allegorically means tracking how [figurative meaning](/ap-lit/key-terms/figurative-meaning "fv-autolink") operates across a whole text rather than in one image. Classic examples include *Animal Farm* (the farm's power struggle mirrors the Russian Revolution) and *1984*, where the Big Brother surveillance motif parallels real totalitarian regimes. When a journey represents a character's growth, or a mural is titled 'Flight and Its Allegories,' you're being told the literal events carry a second, intentional meaning.

## Why It Matters

Allegory supports the figurative-language skills in [Topic 8.4](/ap-lit/unit-8/symbols-conceits-allusions-poetry/study-guide/P0sAR0jN6h6pPkHB5seo "fv-autolink"), where the CED asks you to identify symbols, conceits, and allusions and explain how they create meaning. Allegory is the big-picture version of that skill. Instead of decoding one symbol, you have to recognize a sustained pattern of symbolic meaning and explain what argument or message it builds. That matters for all three FRQs, but especially the prose analysis and literary argument essays, where strong responses move past 'this object is a symbol' to 'the whole [narrative structure](/ap-lit/key-terms/narrative-structure "fv-autolink") encodes a critique.' Allegory is also a fast track to theme. If you can name what the second layer of the story is about, you've basically found the work's central message.

## Connections

### Symbol (Unit 8)

A [symbol](/ap-lit/unit-6/character-motives/study-guide/MJlkjiitYpoN1A1RABCr "fv-autolink") is one object or image with extra meaning; an allegory is a whole narrative where the symbols are linked and sustained. Allegory is essentially symbolism scaled up to the level of plot. If every major element of a story has a consistent second meaning, you're reading an allegory.

### Allusion (Unit 8)

Allusions are brief references to historically or culturally significant people, places, or ideas, and allegories often lean on them. Orwell's *1984* alludes to real totalitarian states, and those allusions are what let the Big Brother [motif](/ap-lit/key-terms/motif "fv-autolink") work as political allegory. Spotting the allusion is often step one in unlocking the allegory.

### Conceit and Extended Metaphor (Unit 8)

A conceit sustains one comparison across a poem; an allegory sustains a whole system of comparisons across a narrative. Same muscle, different scale. If a journey stands for a character's growth for an entire work, the [extended metaphor](/ap-lit/key-terms/extended-metaphor "fv-autolink") has grown into allegory.

### Ozymandias (Units 2 & 6, poetry analysis)

Shelley's crumbling statue works almost allegorically. The shattered monument stands for the inevitable collapse of all tyrannical power. Reading 'Ozymandias' is good practice for the allegorical move of asking what larger idea the literal image is arguing about.

## On the AP Exam

Multiple-choice questions test allegory indirectly by asking what a recurring motif, journey, or pattern represents. Practice questions in this style ask things like what device is at work when a journey represents a character's growth, or what historical parallel Orwell's Big Brother surveillance suggests. Both are allegorical reading in disguise. No released FRQ requires you to label a text 'an allegory,' but the skill shows up constantly in FRQ 2 (prose analysis) and FRQ 3 (literary argument), where you might choose an allegorical work like *Animal Farm* or *Lord of the Flies* and explain how its symbolic structure builds the theme. The key move is never just naming the device. Always connect the second layer of meaning to the author's message or critique.

## allegory vs Symbolism

Symbolism is a single element carrying extra meaning; allegory is an entire narrative organized around symbolic meaning. A novel can contain dozens of symbols without being an allegory. It only becomes allegory when the symbols form a consistent, sustained one-to-one system, like *Animal Farm*, where the pigs, the farm, and the rebellion all map onto specific parts of the Russian Revolution. Quick test: if the second meaning runs through the whole plot, call it allegory; if it's one charged image, call it a symbol.

## Key Takeaways

- An allegory is a story where the literal narrative carries a sustained second meaning, usually moral, political, or religious.
- Allegory falls under AP Lit Topic 8.4, the same skill family as symbols, conceits, and allusions.
- The difference between a symbol and an allegory is scale: one symbol is an image, but an allegory is a whole narrative built from consistent symbols.
- Allegories often depend on allusion, since the second layer of meaning usually points to a real historical, political, or religious situation.
- On FRQs, identifying an allegory is only step one; the points come from explaining what the symbolic layer argues and how it shapes the theme.
- A journey that represents a character's growth is a classic allegorical pattern the exam expects you to recognize.

## FAQs

### What is an allegory in AP Lit?

An allegory is a narrative in which the characters, settings, and events consistently stand for a second layer of meaning, often a moral or political message. It's tested under Topic 8.4, which covers symbols, conceits, and allusions.

### Is every story with symbols an allegory?

No. Most literary works contain symbols, but a work is only an allegory when the symbolic meaning is sustained and systematic across the whole narrative, like *Animal Farm* mapping onto the Russian Revolution. One green light at the end of a dock makes a symbol, not an allegory.

### What's the difference between an allegory and an allusion?

An allusion is a brief reference to something of historical, cultural, literary, or political significance. An allegory is a sustained narrative structure of symbolic meaning. Allegories frequently use allusions as building blocks, the way *1984* alludes to real totalitarian regimes to power its political allegory.

### Do I need to use the word 'allegory' on the AP Lit exam?

Not necessarily. No released FRQ requires the term itself, but the skill of reading a second layer of meaning is exactly what prose-analysis and literary-argument essays reward. If you choose an allegorical work for FRQ 3, naming the allegory and explaining its message is a strong thesis move.

### What are good allegorical works to use for the AP Lit open question?

Orwell's *Animal Farm* (the Russian Revolution) and *1984* (totalitarian surveillance), Golding's *Lord of the Flies* (civilization vs. savagery), and Bunyan's *The Pilgrim's Progress* (the Christian journey) are classic choices because their second layer of meaning is easy to tie to a theme.

## Related Study Guides

- [8.4 Identifying symbols, conceits, and allusions](/ap-lit/unit-8/symbols-conceits-allusions-poetry/study-guide/P0sAR0jN6h6pPkHB5seo)

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