Paraphrase the passage in question.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Act 2 Consists of two quick scenes. This act has the least amount of scenes in the play.
Advertisements

First, type out the passage: “This most excellent canopy, the air, look you, this brave o’erhanging firmament, this majestical roof, fretted with golden.
Air and Air pollution Lecture 1 August 30, 2004 Chemistry and the Environment.
Chapter One – Thinking as a Writer
Hamlet In a Nutshell This is a witty metaphor for Hamlet’s entrapment within the “foul and pestilent” Denmark.
English 12 -February 27th TAKE OUT YOUR WRITING NOTEBOOK AND ANSWER THE FOLLOWING. YOU WILL BE EXPECTED TO WRITE UNTIL INFORMED OTHERWISE. Summarize what.
Hints and ideas to be successful.  Be Prepared physically, rested, eat well, etc.  Timing: Figure how much time you have per question and stick to a.
 Journal #1  Individuals who sin or do great evil will always be punished according to the nature of their crimes, whether in a court of law or as a.
TPCASTT Poetry Analysis.
1 An exposure to Newtonian mechanics Quantities such as velocity, etc. Newtonian spacetime Newton’s laws A smattering of useful equations Motivation In.
Act Two.  Polonius sends Reynaldo to spy on how his son is behaving in Paris.  Ophelia reports that Hamlet entered her room, behaving in an extremely.
Grand Paradigms. How do you see your place in the world?
1.What would it feel like to return home after being away for the summer to discover that your father is dead and your mother had already remarried? 2.What.
5-S Strategies for Passage Analysis
POINT OF VIEW DISCOVERING WES MOORE. POINT OF VIEW (in fictional writing) the narrator's position in relation to the story being told. "this story is.
 College requires critical reading and writing skills. This tutorial is designed to get you started by teaching you to attend to critical features of.
KEYS TO THE MULTIPLE CHOICE. BASIC PATTERNS Straightforward question – This passage is an example of….; The pronoun “it” refers to… Draw a conclusion.
Writing 1 and 2—February 25, 2016 Journal: Read the following quotations and paraphrase what they are each saying about sleep. – Thou hast no figures nor.
ACT III, REVIEW HAMLET. “TO BE OR NOT TO BE” HAMLET.
I Have a Dream.
“Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.”
Hamlet – act 1 RESPONSE QUESTIONS.
IT’S STORY TIME.
Storm Warning (Imagery and Diction Continued)
Rhetorical Appeals: Ethos: Appeal to the credibility of the author
HAMLET ACT III FOCUS QUESTIONS Question labeled #1.1 is for scene i
Essay Topics Argue for Hamlet’s insanity or sanity, supporting with key pieces of evidence and interpreting them in order to prove your case. You must.
English 12 Week of October
Copy the acronym and what it stands for.
Hamlet Act I-V Questions.
Close Reading: The Art and Craft of Analysis
Hamlet Question.
AP Multiple Choice Types of Questions
Hamlet – Shakespeare A Revenge Tragedy
IT’S STORY TIME.
Annotate For… Analysis: Characterization, Setting, Patterns, Situational Details, Foreshadowing, Humor’s impact, Possible themes, Symbolism, Plot twists/mood,
September 18/19 – Introduction to Poetry
Critical Thinking Punctuation: You will have 3 minutes to provide the correct punctuation to the following series of words so that the series of words.
Poetry Analysis Method
Essay Topics Argue for Hamlet’s insanity or sanity, supporting with key pieces of evidence and interpreting them in order to prove your case. You must.
The Balcony Scene Close Reading Part Two
SIFT A Literary Analysis Method
King Claudius: Act 1 Scene 2
CW Introduction to Renaissance Drama Sunday, 18 November 2018
Hamlet Pre-Reading Questions
Nonfiction Why was ______ described as _____________
Minds-On Have you chosen the short story you want to analyse?
Read each of the 4 scenarios and answer the questions for each.
September 25 – Poetry Unit Intro
Painted Faces Close Reading Handout
We will be using these literary terms throughout the school year.
Lesson 2 Ms. Davis British Literature Jan. 22th (B) and Jan. 23th (A)
Poetry English I.
Hamlet “When the ghost and the Prince meet
(in general… and for this essay)
Discovering How Writers Use Tropes and Schemes to Achieve an Effect
One Method to Examine Poetry
IT’S STORY TIME.
What are you going to be writing about?
Speaker Occasion Audience Purpose Subject Tone
What is the subject for the verb, to stand, in line 3
Hamlet Act 1, Scene 1 and 2.
IT’S STORY TIME.
Poetry Analysis Using TP-CASTT
The Language of composition
Complete How to Guide for examining significance
Jan 17 – AP Lit O, What a Rogue (II:ii) Class reading Group work
Vocabulary 1.
SOAPSTone.
Presentation transcript:

Journal Entry #1 (A mote it is to trouble the mind’s eye…, Act I scene i - Horatio, 14 lines) Paraphrase the passage in question. Connotation - identify literary devices present. Analyze the significance of the passage. What purpose do the diction, figurative language, rhetorical techniques, and syntax all serve? I.e. why is this important to the plot or what themes does it illuminate?

Journal Entries - Group 1 Paraphrase the passage in question. (1-16 of Claudius’s speech, Though yet...) Connotation - identify literary devices present. Use of the royal “we”: In Shakespeare’s time, when kings or queens represented their countries and talked about public issues, they used the royal “we”; when dealing with private matters, they used “I.” When a monarch switches from first-person plural to first-person singular, this is a textual clue that signals a shift in situation or tone. Why does Claudius continue to use the royal “we” when addressing Hamlet, whom he calls his “son”? Consider adding journal entries while the students view the film

Journal Entries - Group 2 Paraphrase the passage in question. (1-16 of Claudius’s Speech) Connotation - identify literary devices present. Antithesis: Look for antithesis, the balancing of two contrasting ideas, words, phrases, or sentences in parallel grammatical form. Look for juxtaposition. What feelings do these stark contrasts evoke?

Journal Entries - Group 3 Paraphrase the passage in question. (1-16 of Claudius’s speech) Connotation - identify literary devices present. Choice of words: Why does Claudius remember old Hamlet with “wisest sorrow” rather than “deep sorrow”? Do his expressions in the film match the content of the speech? Look for any clues that might undermine the sincerity of Claudius’s grief and list them with your interpretation.

Journal Entries - Group 4 Paraphrase the passage in question. (1-16 of Claudius’s speech) Connotation - identify literary devices present. Syntax: Look for any evidence in punctuation or verse length that might show hesitation or conflict within Claudius. How does the content of what Claudius is saying (that he has married Gertrude) affect his delivery of this information?

Journal Entries - Group 5 Paraphrase the passage in question. (1-16 of Claudius’s speech) Connotation - identify literary devices and explain how they function. Order of ideas he presents: Look at the chronology of issues in Claudius’s speech. In what order does he address the following concerns: Hamlet’s mourning, his marriage to Gertrude, Laertes’s petition, and Norway’s impending invasion? What message does this order send to Hamlet? What are Claudius’s priorities?

Journal Entry #2 Paraphrase the passage in question. Hamlet, Act II, scene ii, “I will tell you why…” Paraphrase the passage in question. Connotation - identify literary devices present. Analyze the significance of the passage. What purpose do the diction, figurative language, rhetorical techniques, and syntax all serve? I.e. why is this important to the plot or what themes does it illuminate? What would the play lose without it?

Friday, January 27th, 2017 Bell Work: Spot which word reveals Hamlet’s attitude towards life. I will tell you why. So shall my anticipation prevent your discovery, and your secrecy to the king and queen moult no feather. I have of late—but wherefore I know not—lost all my mirth, forgone all custom of exercises, and indeed it goes so heavily with my disposition that this goodly frame, the earth, seems to me a sterile promontory; this most excellent canopy, the air—look you, this brave o'erhanging firmament, this majestical roof fretted with golden fire—why, it appears no other thing to me than a foul and pestilent congregation of vapors. What a piece of work is a man! How noble in reason, how infinite in faculty! In form and moving how express and admirable! In action how like an angel, in apprehension how like a god! The beauty of the world. The paragon of animals. And yet, to me, what is this quintessence of dust? Man delights not me. No, nor woman neither, though by your smiling you seem to say so. Homework: Read Act III, Scene i. Write two questions about terms or concepts you did not understand. Prepare Socratic Seminar Responses (Group 1).

Journal Entry Paraphrase the following passages in your journals: a) p. 1747-48 (Now I am alone…) b) 1750 (To be or not to be) c) 1763 (O, my offense is rank…) d) 1764-65 (Now might I do it pat…) e) 1775 (How all occasions do inform…)