Warm Up 6/5: Write nothing.

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Presentation transcript:

Warm Up 6/5: Write nothing. Get into groups based on the season in which you were born (winter, spring, summer, fall). Bring your stuff. Wait quietly.

Agenda Work in chapter groups. Review and copy all chapter summaries. Read chapter 25.

Learning Targets I can participate meaningfully in a class discussion. I can cite strong and thorough textual evidence that supports my inferences and analysis of the text. I can analyze the development of the theme throughout a text including how it is shaped by specific details and events. I can analyze a point of view or cultural experience as reflected in a work from outside the US.

Group Work: With your group, Read your assigned chapter. Write a two-sentence plot summary, indicating the most important event(s) in the chapter. Explain why this chapter is crucial to the book. Find a quote from the book that you feel is most indicative of the chapter. Copy it, and be prepared to explain why.

Aristotle’s Tragic Hero Someone who is “highly renowned and prosperous” Must fall from fortune Has a tragic flaw: a character flaw that causes the hero’s undoing; a weakness (i.e., pride, jealousy) Somewhat responsible for own downfall Recognizes flaw after downfall and accepts consequences (may be enlightened by experience) Suffering arouses sympathy from the audience Audience can relate to hero being “human”