Monday, October 15 1. Vocab 2. Ray Bradbury Background 3. Read intro to The Illustrated Man 4. Tattoo assignment HW - Tattoo assignment due tomorrow! I.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The people Look for some people. Write it down. By the water
Advertisements

Jeopardy Q 1 Q 2 Q 3 Q 4 Q 5 Q 6Q 16Q 11Q 21 Q 7Q 12Q 17Q 22 Q 8Q 13Q 18 Q 23 Q 9 Q 14Q 19Q 24 Q 10Q 15Q 20Q 25 Final Jeopardy Literature Terms III.
A.
The Lady, or the Tiger?.
VOCABULARY FOR “THERE WILL COME SOFT RAINS” BY RAY BRADBURY.
Point of View  The story is about George and Lydia not “I” so it is 3 rd person not 1 st person  It is Limited to the thoughts of George. We do not.
LITERARY ELEMENT & THEIR DEFINITIONS. Short Story.
Night Essay For this unit, you will compose an essay instead of taking a test. The essay will answer the following prompt: What makes Elie Wiesel’s Night.
Literary Terms AND DEFINITIONS. Short Story and novel  A short story is a piece of fiction 15,000 words or less  A novel is a piece of fiction 50,000.
Everything you need to know in order to set up your Reader’s Notebook
Study Questions, Answers
For Young Adult Reading
Short Story Unit Notes.
A Separate Peace by John Knowles
Literary Terms English I Honors
Introduction and Literary Terms
Novels/Short Stories.
I am ready to test!________ I am ready to test!________
Sight Words.
Literary Terms: Unlock their Meanings!. CHARACTERS Antagonsist The character who opposes the protagonist. The VILLAIN!! Antagonsist The character who.
allusion  a reference to a well- known person, place, work of literature, art, music, etc.
Literary Terms The elements within a story or novel the author uses to reveal the message of the story.
Literary Terms.  Fiction: A type of writing based on imagination.  Non-Fiction: A type of writing that is based on facts.
Literary Terms English Mrs. Maxwell.
LITERARY TERMS AKA: The-Most-Important-Notes- You’ll-Take-This-Year-So-Copy-Every- Word-Down.
SHORT STORY ELEMENTS. 1.Setting the place and TIME of the action of the story 2.Plot series of events in a story 3.Climax the turning point in the story.
1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.
Understand Narrator, Voice, and Persona. Standard Reading Literature 3.9 –Explain how voice, persona, and the choice of narrator affect characterization.
Before we continue with our F451 discussion, get out your SOAPSTone notes and the last SOAPSTone chart that you completed…
5/18/15 READ: Finish up through chapter 14 for tomorrow (and the guide questions) HW: 1.Complete the class work (chapters guide questions) – for.
Welcome to our Short Story Unit Author The writer of a literary work or document (novel, short story, poem, etc.)
LITERARY TERMS Know them, use them, LOVE them!. CHARACTERIZATION The method a writer uses to reveal the personality of a character. The method a writer.
Literature Terms. Plot The order of events in the story.
Literary Terms English 11 The narrative perspective from which a story is told.
LITERARY ELEMENT & THEIR DEFINITIONS. Antagonist.
Ray Bradbury.  Science-fiction and fantasy  Best known for his novel Fahrenheit 451.
Literary Elements Notes continued “The Cask of Amontillado”
Literary Elements PlotPoint of ViewMood SettingForeshadowingCharacters FlashbackConflictTheme IronyMotivationSuspense Symbol.
Elements of Literature. PLOT Exposition: the characters and setting are introduced. Rising Action: the conflict is revealed. Climax: the highest point.
High Frequency Words August 31 - September 4 around be five help next
Narrative Writing Tells a Story It Can Be Fiction or Nonfiction Fiction Types Realistic  seem like people you know or meet Fantastic  characters are.
ELEMENTS OF LITERATURE. Allusion An indirect reference to another literary work or to a famous person, place or event.
Ray Bradbury’s.  George Hadley - Concerned father.  Lydia Hadley - Concerned mother.  Peter Hadley - Child of George and Lydia.  Wendy Hadley - Child.
Sight Words.
High Frequency Words.
Novels/Short Stories. NOVEL A long fictional story, whose length is normally somewhere between one hundred and five hundred pages Uses the elements of.
WORLD LITERATURE Week 23. DO NOW: MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9 TH, 2015 Give an example sentence for: The simple past tense The present perfect tense Explain when.
Analyzing Stories Introducing the Elements of a Story.
The Veldt. Close Reading Questions Why does the author choose the name ‘Happy life Home’ for the house and how is this ironic? Describe how the nursery.
“The Veldt” Ray Bradbury. Ray Bradbury, recipient of the 2000 National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, the 2004.
Created By Sherri Desseau Click to begin TACOMA SCREENING INSTRUMENT FIRST GRADE.
LITERARY TERMS Know them, use them, LOVE them!. SIMILE Comparing two things using “like” or “as” Comparing two things using “like” or “as”EXAMPLE The.
Jeopardy Final Jeopardy Literary Elements 1 Literary Elements 2
Presentation on Ray Bradbury
Know them, use them, LOVE them!
Elements of literature
SIFT A Literary Analysis Method
Literary Terms.
Literary Terms.
Ray Bradbury Author Background.
SHORT STORY ELEMENTS.
Ray Bradbury “The Veldt”.
By Ray Bradbury.
Fry Word Test First 300 words in 25 word groups
Literary Elements Plot Point of View Mood
By Ray Bradbury.
Unit 2 Terminology Vocab
The of and to in is you that it he for was.
HISTORICAL CONTEXT Written during the 1950`s
Presentation transcript:

Monday, October Vocab 2. Ray Bradbury Background 3. Read intro to The Illustrated Man 4. Tattoo assignment HW - Tattoo assignment due tomorrow! I CAN: * personally connect to a piece of literature & use that connection to understand an author's meaning better * use an author's background can help me to understand an author's meaning better

Ray Bradbury is one of those rare individuals whose writing has changed the way people think. His more than five hundred published works -- short stories, novels, plays, screenplays, television scripts, and verse -- exemplify the American imagination at its most creative. Once read, his words are never forgotten. His best-known and most beloved books, THE MARTIAN CHRONICLES, THE ILLUSTRATED MAN, FAHRENHEIT 451 and SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES, are masterworks that readers carry with them over a lifetime. His timeless, constant appeal to audiences young and old has proven him to be one of the truly classic authors of the 20th Century -- and the 21st.

The Illustrated Man THE ILLUSTRATED MAN is classic Bradbury --a collection of tales that breathe and move, animated by sharp, intaken breath and flexing muscle. Here are eighteen startling visions of humankind's destiny, unfolding across a canvas of decorated skin--visions as keen as the tattooist's needle and as colorful as the inks that indelibly stain the body.

Tuesday, October QW #12 - Tues. Tunes 2. Share tattoos 3. Read The Veldt w/ study guide I CAN: * analyze why author's choose specific words to evoke a response from a reader * analyze a text & determine how an author utilizes foreshadowing & irony

QW #12 Stuck? ·Have your parents ever made you extremely angry? Explain. ·Do you think you are spoiled? Explain. ·Can technology be bad for society? explain Happy life, with the machines Scattered around the room Look what they made, they made it for me Happy technology Outside, the lions run Feeding on remains We'll never leave, look at us now So in love with the way we are Every night, they rock us to sleep Digital family Is it real, or is it a dream? Can you believe in machines? Outside, the beating sun Can you hear the screams? We'll never leave, look at us now So in love with the way we are Here The world that the children made Here The world that the children made Here The world that the children made * Use imagery - your five senses!

Literary Terms Irony - opposite of what you expect Diction - word choice - selected painstakingly by authors to elicit a response from the reader Foreshadowing - clues/hints the author gives you about the end of the story Tone - attitude of the author toward a subject Mood - emotion a reader feels in reaction to a passage or entire story

The pictures were moving, each in its turn, each for a brief minute or two. There in the moonlight, with the tiny tinkling thoughts and the distant sea voices, it seemed, each little drama was enacted. Whether it took an hour or three hours for the dramas to finish, it would be hard to say. I only know that I lay fascinated and did not move while the stars wheeled in the sky. Eighteen Illustrations, eighteen tales. I counted them one by one. Primarily my eyes focused upon a scene, a large house with two people in it. I saw a flight of vultures on a blazing flesh sky, I saw yellow lions, and I heard voices. The first Illustration quivered and came to life....

1. What is the meaning of neurotic as used on page 6 of the story? A. crazy B. playful C. evil D. obsessed 2. On the last page of the story, why did "a shadow flicker over Mr. McClean's hot face"? A. he was standing under a tree B. he realized what happened to Mr. & Mrs. Hadley C. a vulture flew over him D. he realized that he had given the Hadley's bad advice 3. What is the tone of the story? A. jovial B. apathetic C. cynical D. admiring 4. What characterizes Mr. Hadley's initial reaction to the nursery? A. carelessly nonchalant B. reluctantly committed C. wholeheartedly against D. enthusiastically supportive 5. When George Hadley tells his family they are going to shut off the house he says, "Now we're going to really start living." Explain what he means by this phrase. Provide 3 examples from the story to support your response.