Painted Faces Close Reading Handout

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
SIFT Method Literary Analysis.
Advertisements

What is Rhetoric ?. Rhetoric The art or study of using language effectively and persuasively. The art of finding and analyzing all the choices involving.
Literary Analysis Review
Writing The Analytical Paragraph
The Tools You Need to Break It Down.  I can analyze a text using elements of the rhetorical web.
Speaker Occasion Audience Purpose Subject Tone
“The Yellow Wallpaper”
Thesis statement defined  A thesis statement is the idea the writer intends to prove in the essay.  It is the main point and the controlling idea of.
Literary Terms. 1.Abstract- expressing a quality apart from an object; the opposite of concrete. 2.Aesthetic- appreciative of things that are pleasing.
AP Prompt #2: Prose Prompt. The FREE RESPONSE prompt (almost) ALWAYS asks… …what it contributes the meaning of the work as a whole …how it illuminates.
Annotation Finding literary devices within a literary work.
AN INTRODUCTION TO LITERARY ANALYSIS AP Style 1. Literary Analysis starts with close reading  When we read closely, we observe facts and details about.
10/7/14 Do Now: Take one of each of the handouts from the front and read the directions on the top of the page. Homework: - Finish reading chapters 9 &
Thinking About Literature. What is literature? A work that rewards the time, concentration, and creativity put inot reading, re-reading, exploring, analyzing,
PERFORMING A CLOSE READING How to do one on a literary passage.
Recognizing Modes of Persuasion Objective: I will learn to recognize and apply rhetorical strategies.
An introduction to literary analysis
Close Reading A step by step guide….
Meaning What is the work about? What is its theme? What effect or impression does the reader have ? What is the argument or summary of the work? What.
DIDLS: The Tone Acronym
Literary Criticism Research 11AP Literary Criticism Paper.
Practice Makes Perfect!.  Read the passage from Lord of the Flies beginning with, “Jack was bent double,” (pages ) and ends with “He did not notice.
How to: Prose Response Essays. Copy the following notes in yellow regarding prose-response essays: First figure out your tasks. What is the prompt asking.
Literary Term Review (9/12) Archetype: a pattern of character, plot, or image that appears across cultures and is repeated through time periods. Parallelism:
Voice Lessons An Introduction to Diction, Detail, Imagery, Syntax, Tone.
Rhetorical Triangle and Key Terms
2E Analyzing Literary Elements
The Rhetorical Analysis Essay
Reading The Scarlet Letter in AP Language and Composition
Copy the acronym and what it stands for.
Approaches to the Analyzing Passages Prompts
SIFT: An AP strategy designed to help you explore how a writer uses literary elements and stylistic techniques to convey meaning and/or theme S: symbol:
SIFT A Literary Analysis Method
Annotate For… Analysis: Characterization, Setting, Patterns, Situational Details, Foreshadowing, Humor’s impact, Possible themes, Symbolism, Plot twists/mood,
SIFT A Literary Analysis Method
PATT the MAIDS What is PATT the MAIDS
PATT the MAIDS What is PATT the MAIDS
Literary Analysis Drama
Dialectical Journal: Rhetorical Analysis
SIFTT Method of Literary Analysis
Sept. 2 - Add the following words to your list of literary terms:
AP English Language and Composition
RI06 Determine an author's point of view or purpose in a text and analyze how an author uses rhetoric to advance that point of view or purpose.
Painted Faces Close Reading Handout
Close Reading The Elements of Style.
Test Part I = Multiple Choice
AP English Language and Composition
Why do we need to keep track of our thinking??
AQA GCSE Paper 2 Glastonbury and Greenwich fair
Poetry.
PASTA Mnemonic Device P—Purpose A—Audience S—Subject T—Tone
What’s with the attitude?
Note Taking Format TERM NOTES MY TRANSLATION Literary Term Name Date
Speaker Occasion Audience Purpose Subject Tone
Basic Literary Terms English 9.
Literary Devices 10 Honor.
Boot Camp AP Literature
Rhetorical Analysis Deconstructioning the Text and the Author’s Purpose.
Literary Devices Alliteration: the repetition of initial consonant sounds Example: Allusion: a reference to a well known person, place, event, literary.
Reading Standards Vocabulary
Writing and analysing poetry
Common Exam for English 9
The Language of composition
Key Features of Literary Analyses…
Multiple Choice Practice: The Brudenells
EAPIB: Teaching a Stone to Talk
Analyzing an Author’s Style and Tone for CAHSEE.
Summer AP Language Vocabulary Words.
Literary Terms Poster Activity: Creating Voice
Presentation transcript:

Painted Faces Close Reading Handout Responses are mostly referring to Golding’s diction. REMINDER: Diction is word choice that has connotative meaning. What is important about recognizing diction? Diction informs the reader: Tone (writer’s attitude) Characterization, mood, and/or theme

Tone – the writer’s attitude toward the subject Revealed through literary devices and rhetorical strategies Diction (word choice with connotative meaning) Detail (facts without interpretive meaning of the words) Syntax (sentence structure) Contrast (opposites) Imagery (sensory details often with diction to create a scene) Figurative language (simile, metaphor, personification) Evidence comes from the text itself. Consider the two tones on your paper. What words and/or phrases support the tones? What other devices, if any, reveal the tones?

Examples of Words that reveal tone Planned New face His breathing troubled the mirror Mask Sinewy Bloodthirsty snarling Shame and self-consciousness What do these examples suggest?

Incorporating Quotes into Your Sentence Use ONLY the KEY words. Always keep in mind your purpose. Sample: Possible tones: eerie, fearful, disturbing Displeased with his first attempt to conceal his face, Jack meticulously “plan[s] his new face,” calculating each mark and color so as to create a look with which he is satisfied.

Choose one quote. Incorporate it into an example sentence.

Connect the example to the thesis. Golding uses diction to create an eerie tone, signifying Jack’s immersion into savagery. Displeased with his first attempt to conceal his appearance, Jack meticulously “plan[s] his new face,” calculating each mark and color so as to create a look with which he is satisfied. Golding’s seemingly simple words stress the deliberation behind each motion Jack makes to recreate his image to his own specifications. The intensity mounts with each new movement that brings Jack closer to his goal. Golding’s diction suggests not only Jack’s intent to obscure his identity and, ultimately, reject any bond to civilization, but also Golding’s unnerving response to the possibility that such a situation would ever arise. … (More examples are needed.)

Journal #2 – Painted Faces In a journal entry discuss how William Golding uses diction to present the dominant tone or two different but complimentary tones in the close reading passage from chapter 4 of Lord of the Flies. Reminders: Focus on only ONE literary device. Write a clear, specific thesis. Practice writing example sentences and connecting those examples to your thesis.