The Body biography.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
O F M ICE AND M EN HALFWAY PROJECT. H ERE ’ S WHAT YOU HAVE TO DO : It is the halfway point in Of Mice and Men, and you will be creating a scrapbook of.
Advertisements

ENGLISH I MR. STANBERRY. JOURNAL ENTRY Free write Friday. - In order to receive full credit for Free write Fridays, you must write a minimum of five sentences.
Visualization By: Kierstin, Brittany, Wendy, and Stephennie.
Western Literature May 18, In assigned groups, you will be creating a body biography to demonstrate high-level close reading and character analysis.
Bloom’s Ball Project.
Drawing Upon The Story of Your Life Purpose- To articulate your personal story though expressive drawing. Students will document their past, present and.
BOOK PROJECT #1 Instructions for summative project for Mrs. Fendrick’s Language Arts and Reading Class.
What Makes a Hero? subject Autopsy. Who Is Your Hero? We’ve talked a lot about defining heroes, and who our personal heroes are, over the last few weeks.
April 2 nd, 2014 PowerPoint courtesy of Flor Rojas Get out your journals as you walk into class. Today we’ll be: Reading our eulogies to the class. Writing.
Page onePage one  Draw a picture of the outline of Toya’s face. Imagine how you think her face looks and draw it. After drawing the image. Cut it out.
Get Your Hands on a Good Book Due Monday, December 15, 2014.
Interactive Journals How to make your journal content-rich and creative.
LORD OF THE FLIES. SYMBOLISM is an object, action, or idea that represents something other than itself, often of a more abstract nature.
Today in Class Finish chapters 1-2 and their reading guide pages. On a separate sheet of paper, consider the following plot and character elements from.
SENIOR ENGLISH RESEARCH PROJECT ADVICE FROM YOUR OLDER SELF.
Level 4 Unit 2 Defining Style.
Name, period number, date!
Topics, Rules, Issues, Evaluation
Poetry Blog Requirements
“The Cask of Amontillado”
“The Cask Of Amontillado”
Presented by: Sandra Kyle Edu 505 – Winter 2008 Professor: Dr. H. Yang
Book Art Projects 1.
Writing About Symbolism
Edgar Allan Poe
Write your own poem that ties together The Crucible and The Scarlet Letter. Your poem must include parallelism (remember our discussion yesterday!). It.
Monday, November 13th, 2017 In the library
“The Fall of the House of Usher”
Introduction Task The Vietnam War Resources.
PRE-Ap Independent Novel
workbook NOVEL ANALYSIS
Making a Body Biography
Hosting A Reading Fair 4th Grade West Side.
Name:_________________________ The New Independent Reading Curriculum
How to Answer Constructed Response Questions
Agenda Warm up Lord of the Flies Quiz Week 1
“The cask of amontillado”
The Body biography.
Grade 7: Module 3: Unit 1: Lesson 2
The Body biography.
Welcome! February 12th, 2018 Monday
The Cask of Amontillado
Visual Arts – All Levels
Postmortem of a Protagonist
Station Eleven Expanded Illustration
warm-up (fusion, non-journal)
Homework Task 4: Investigation of An Artist
Macbeth Revision of Act 3 Date:
English 2 - May 17th Agenda: TPS Reflections
One Pager Review Assignment
ANNOTATED ILLUSTRATION
Looking forward to TIMED WRITE FRIDAY!
Maps in Art What is the purpose of a map?
Comic Book/Story Board
Character and Point of View
Reading Bellwork Pull out your book and read silently.
Please take Cornell Notes
Today Please take the Touchstone #1. This is like a benchmark. Just do your best and don’t worry! When you’re done, return to Ch. 1 and do the Ch. 1.
Warm Up 5/9 Imagine you were going on a trip around the universe. This will include planets you’ve never heard about. You will be on this trip for five.
Name:_________________________ The New Independent Reading Curriculum
Turn to a partner… And discuss the following questions:
Day 48 – Symbolism, Cask of Amontillado
Paper Bag Book Report.
August 28th, 2014 Standard: Integrate multiple sources of information
Meet the Writer – Pages TEXT FEATURES
January 23, 2017 Faculty Meeting.
“The Black Cat” Mind Reader Assignment
The Painted Drum In-Class Paragraph.
Identity/Self-Portrait Unit
ELA 9 5/31 “In Their Shoes” activity
Presentation transcript:

The Body biography

What is a body biography? A body biography is a combination of artwork and writing (quotes from the novel and your own explanations of those quotes). You will decorate your body biography according to the requirements to demonstrate your understanding of this character. Please note: your body biography is not suppose to be a literal representation of your character. Instead, it should be more like a giant collage of written ideas, drawings, and symbols that work together to show us how well you understand your character, but we also want you to be CREATIVE!

What’s the purpose? The purpose behind creating a body biography is to allow you to take a DEEP look at one character from the story. You will have to review significant events, choices that your character made, and changes that your character went through internally within the course of the novel/play/story. You will have to take a serious look into what makes your character tick – what motivates your character, how your character feels about himself/herself at the beginning of the novel, and how those feelings may have changed by the end of the novel.

How do we create one? Small Group instructions: For your chosen character, you and your group will create a body biography- a visual (body template) and written portrait, illustrating several aspects of the character’s life within the piece. Make sure you display your character’s name prominently on the body outline paper. One of you will need to be the “body”. Have that person lie down on the paper. Trace the outline of the person’s body (body template). Then choose the best way to represent the following aspects of the character symbolically:

1. The heart Where should you place it to best represent what this character loves most? What should it look like and what shape, color, pictures, or symbols should be included in it? If the character’s love changes, you should find a way to represent this visually. The heart is a good place for illustrating the important relationships in his/her life.

2. The backbone Actors often discuss a character’s “spine.” This is the character’s objective within the novel. What is the most important goal for your character? What drives his/her thoughts and actions? This is his/her spine. How can you illustrate it? Example: Montresor’s (The Cask of Amontillado by Edgar Allan Poe) spine might look like a chain since he is obviously chained to his past crime of murder through his haunting conscience.

3. The feet On what is the character standing? This should be a symbolic representation of the character’s most fundamental beliefs about life. Example: Dr. Martin Luther King might stand on an equal sing to symbolize the racial equality he fought for during his life.

4. The hands What does the character hold in his or her hands? Items that are associated with the character either literally or figuratively should be included. Example: SpongeBob might hold a spatula or a jelly fishing net.

5. quotations Near the character’s head, students should place three direct quotations from the story that sum up the character and add to an understanding of the character. These quotes do not necessarily need to be spoken by the character. Possibly, another character says them in regard to your character. For The Crucible, go back to those narrative parts about each introduced character! I NEED AT LEAST ONE QUOTATION TO BE FROM ACT 2 TO SHOW DEVELOPMENT OF YOUR CHARACTER!

6. colors Colors are often symbolic. What color(s) do you associate with your character? Why? How can you effectively work these colors into your project?

7. Educate your peers After we all finish, each group will do an informal presentation of their biographies and be able to rationalize their biography choices and aspects. Each group will turn in a sheet with reasoning for all six aspects of their biography. On Schoology, I will post an assignment which every group member will submit a short survey about their group members. Group surveys will factor into the project grades. This project will count for NO LESS THAN ONE HUNDRED POINTS. Take it seriously and invest effort, teamwork, and time. Be creative!

Example 1

PAGE NUMBERS PARRIS: pages 138-141 MR. PUTNAM: page 145 PROCTOR: page 148 REBECCA: page 150 HALE: pages 155-157 GILES: page 159

Example 2

Example 3