Allegory Part II 8-21-2018.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
IT’S STORY TIME.
Advertisements

MOTIF In a literary work, a motif can be seen as an image, sound, action or other figures that have a symbolic significance and contributes toward the.
Literary Devices and Terms: Write ‘em, Learn ‘em, Love ‘em.
Do Now: Answer in complete sentences.
Literary Terms Vocabulary #1 ©Mrs. A. Rotker. Literary Terms Vocabulary #1 ©Mrs. A. Rotker.
How to write a Book Review. Readers don’t have to know everything that happens in your book, or all of your reasons for liking it. Try to say enough so.
IT’S STORY TIME.
Elements of a Short Story
IT’S STORY TIME.
The Lottery By Shirley Jackson.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Theme is the central idea, concern, or purpose in a literary work
Test Unit 2: Lesson 6 “Once Upon a Cool Motorcycle Dude”
How to write a Book Review
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
IT’S STORY TIME.
…and theme, too Symbol vs. Motif.
What is included in a story?
Story Structure What you need to know!.
Literary Terms.
Year 2: How to help your child
ABC Themes and Images.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Bellringer—Tuesday Directions: Find the TEN (10) errors in the passage below. About a half our before sunrise on August , Christopher Columbus set.
Dialectical Journals Kate Hendrix Pre-AP English II
Thinking about our Reading
Literary Elements Plot Point of View Mood
Thinking about our Reading
A Worn Path Lesson 2.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
They work hand-in-hand.
Evidence? The evidence you mention pertains to the CRAFT of the painting a technique to convey a message What message is the painter sending?
Introduction to Academic Language
Let’s Express Our Understanding!
IT’S STORY TIME.
Clues to Theme in Literature
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Minds-On In your groups, I want you to design a T-Chart. LEADER
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story youtube. com/watch
Let’s Prepare BYOT yellow, pink, & one other
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Thinking About How You Read
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Short Story
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
IT’S STORY TIME.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Thinking About How You Read
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Station Rotation Instructions: Depending on which station you are at, find the corresponding instructions.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
English 10 Literary Terms.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Romeo & Juliet Lesson 1 LA Guidebook 2.0.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Let’s Prepare BYOT 3 COLORS 4 corners handout.
Bellringer As we have discussed this week, symbols have both LITERAL and FIGURATIVE meaning. Look at the image to the right and describe both its literal.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Presentation transcript:

Allegory Part II 8-21-2018

Bellwork 8-21-2018 Describe one motif that you found from the text A Worn Path. How did you find it? How does it help to build the theme? Finally, what do you think is the theme?

Half a Day by Naguib Mahfouz (GB) Learning Targets Read an allegory by Naguib Mahfouz that teaches about life as a journey. (9.RL.RRTC.10) Complete a timeline that both traces a character’s conflicts and records motifs used by the author. (9- 10.RL.KID.3) Explain how a character’s point of view affects both the conflict and the resolution. (9-10.RL.CS.6)

Audio Recording of Half a Day https://www.youtube.com/embed/xjF4XmrJ5EU?iv_load_policy=3&rel=0

Questions to consider when re-reading. What words stick out to you?

Relevance What words and phrases have a lot of or strong meaning to you?

What is the author trying to say? What similarities do you notice about all the words you selected? What do those words have in common?

Theme Why might the author have selected those words? What message is the author trying to send?

Word Choice creates meaning. How does the author’s choice of words impact your understanding of the text?

Connotation Word Groups You can write your connotation word pairs like this. The words ___ and ____ remind me of ___. The words ___ and ____ create a ___ mood. The words ___ and ___ don’t seem to go together. The words ___ and ___ make me think ___.

Location+Time=Setting How much time passed during the course of the story?” “What effect does the author’s manipulation of time have on the story?”

Directions: Only complete the first two rows of the handout at this point, It is up to you and your partner to decide which four events are most important to the story. Make sure to move chronologically through the text. Chronologically- (of a record of events) starting with the earliest and following the order in which they occurred.

Ways to find the main conflicts faster: [1] Answer these questions of the story: Who, what, when, where, why, how. [2] Summarize the story with your partner. You will most likely say the important part out loud.

Motifs vs Symbols Sometimes, examples of motif are mistakenly identified as examples of symbols..

Symbols are images, ideas, sounds, or words that represent something else, and help to understand an idea or a thing.

Dead Trees Dead Leaves Dead Fields of Corn Motifs, on the other hand, are images, ideas, sounds, or words that help to explain the central idea of a literary work – the theme. Dead Trees Dead Leaves The author could be painting a gloomy picture to show danger and make her more of a hero. Dead Fields of Corn

Motifs vs Symbolism Also, a symbol may appear once or twice in a literary work, whereas a motif is a recurring element

Questions to Consider in Choosing Motifs● What words, phrases, images, ideas, objects, events repeat or are emphasized throughout the story?● What could these symbolize?● Can you categorize any of the symbols into recurring motifs?

Questions to Consider in Writing Commentary What is this story about on a literal level? How is the narrator’s experience representative of the wider human experience? How do the language and structure of the story create surprise for the reader? Upon rereading the story, how do these elements provide clues to the surprising ending? What does the story suggest about human experience? Consider the title of the story. Why does the author suggest that the events of the story occur in “half a day” despite the final quotation of the story?

Lesson Complete!