Scavenger Hunt: J. Allan Hobson’s Dreaming: An Introduction to the Science of Sleep I’ll display a question or task. The first student to come up with.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
IB Oral Presentation Presentation dates: January-February (tentative)
Advertisements

Schools of Thought on The Metamorphosis
Start-Up – Partner Talk
Explanations of dreaming
Freud vs. Hobson & McCarley
Dream Theories. #1 The Unconscious Wish Fulfillment Theory (Freud 1900) Dreams = unconscious wishes; Freud believed road to your unconscious was through.
Of Mice and Men Chapter Questions.
CAHSEE WRITING REVIEW On the California High School Exit Exam you will be expected to write one essay. The essay will be one of four types of writing.
Selection Focus Transparency 4-1 Literary Elements Transparency 4-1.
Franz KafkaFranz Kafka Born in Prague in 1883 Middle Class Jewish Family Wrote in German Lawyer employed in an insurance company Brotberuf = day job Died.
Analytic Approaches to Literature (Overview) Definition of Analysis: the examination of smaller parts and their relation to the larger whole. The Major.
Franz Kafka ( ) born to a German speaking, Jewish family in Prague born to a German speaking, Jewish family in Prague had a difficult relationship.
The Pit and the Pendulum
Last Minute Revision! Literature GCSE. Do not focus on what you know! Focus on what you don’t!
DREAMS AND THEIR MEANINGS By Dr. J. A. Hadfield Presentation: Jason M. Ward ACWR101 1/19.
Literature Test: Flowers for Algernon
What must students cover
MRS. RUDD LAKE HAZEL MIDDLE SCHOOL  LITERARY TERMS  EVIDENCE AND INFERENCE  INTERPRETING POETRY.
Dreams sequence of images, emotions, and thoughts passing through a sleeping person’s mind hallucinatory imagery, discontinuities and incongruities delusional.
Love and War. War  Fold paper in half – the long way  Write “War” at the top of the paper  Brainstorm a list of concrete or abstract ideas that revolve.
Standard Grade Writing. Four Types of Writing  to convey information  discursive (to deploy ideas, expound, argue and evaluate)  to describe personal.
Active Reading and “Short Shorts”. Active Reading “Active Reading” of a literary work will help you to understand it more fully. These techniques may.
Kafka: The Metamorphosis (Volume F). Franz Kafka (1883–1924) Jewish heritage Prague father–son relationship Freud, oedipal insurance company.
Franz Kafka (1883–1924) Jewish heritage Prague father–son relationship Freud, oedipal insurance company.
The Parts of an Essay Your Guide to Writing Strong Academic Essays.
DREAMS, DREAMS, DREAMS OH WHAT D0 THEY MEAN??? DEPENDS ON WHO YOU ASK…. DREAM THEORIES.
EQ: What are the different dream theories?. Bellringer Look over your dream journal Do you see any patterns? Did you have the same dream or type of dream.
Two quotes 165 Brief summary of the most representative interpretations The religious aspect in literary criticism of Franz Kafka by Meno Spann (59) Freudian.
OAA Vocabulary!. Warm-Up 24,  Theme: A topic of discussion or writing; It may be stated or implied. Also, it should be expressed in sentence.
Selection Focus Transparency 3-1 Selection 3 Contents Click a hyperlink to go to the corresponding content area. Before You Read Reading the Selection.
Literary Theory How Do I Evaluate a Text?.
Literary Theory. Three Perspectives THE AUTHOR Three Perspectives THE AUTHORTHE TEXT.
8 CRITICAL APPROACHES FOR STUDYING LITERATURE
Aim: How will we apply Psychoanalytic Criticism to “The Story of an Hour” Do Now: 1. Copy the following definition: PSYCHOANALYTIC CRITICISM: the application.
FFocuses on language, structure, and tone IIntrinsic Reading vs. Extrinsic FFormalists study relationship between literary devices and meaning.
Read Like a Reader Read Like a Writer. When did we stop learning how to read, and just start reading? How do we become better at reading?
Warmup Pretend that you were able to interview Edgar Allan Poe. Write down 3-4 questions you would like to ask him. Share: When you share your partners.
Group 1 Amanda Ayoub Stephanie Regan Alicia Iafonaro Hanna Stolarczyk The Mind Beyond Our Immediate Awareness.
Writing a Thesis for a Literary Analysis Grade 11 English.
Using Mental Models To Enhance Student Writing Diane Fanning.
Copyright © 2010, Pearson Education Inc., All rights reserved.  Prepared by Katherine E. L. Norris, Ed.D.  West Chester University of Pennsylvania This.
Short story by Sabina murray
Chapter 2 Understanding & Analyzing the Selection.
Jeopardy Poetry General Literary FictionNonfiction Short Stories Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
EQ: What are the different dream theories?
Ernest Hartmann Professor of Psychiatry at Tufts University Former President of the International Association of the Study of Dreams Director of the Sleep.
DREAMS.
A biological theory of dreaming LO1: To revise the key definitions of Hobson & McCarley’s (1977) activation-synthesis theory. LO2: To evaluate their theory,
Chapter 1: What Is Psychology?. Learning Outcomes Define psychology. Describe the various fields of psychology.
“A change of heart about animals” By jeremy Rifkin
Poetry 7th grade literature.
Existentialism Summer Carmack. Existentialism Existentialism is a term philosophers use to emphasize freedom and choice. Humans use these view to define.
Contemporary Literature Week 13 November 14-18, 2011.
Writing Workshop Feedback Protocol Let’s improve our writing!
Textual Analysis Introduction. What is Textual Analysis? Textual Analysis, as the name suggests, involves the Analysis of a literary Text. It is very.
DREAMS. Dream Facts: 25% of your night’s sleep or 2 hours is spent dreaming. Sleep Thinking – Vague, uncreative, bland thoughts about real-life events.
A Change of Heart About Animals
Antar Abdellah.  Writing is a process NOT a product  You need to go through the experience of writing to produce real valuable pieces  Copying or quoting.
Literary Theory Reader-Response Criticism. Subjective vs. Objective When we refer to something as “subjective” we mean that it pertains to the individual.
Sleeps and Dreams The purpose of sleep and dreams.
Literary Theory: Biographical Criticism
THE WORLD OF DREAMS “I do not believe that I am now dreaming, but I cannot prove that I am not.” Philosopher Bertrand Russell ( ) Despite remembering.
Paper 1: Tues 6th June GCSE English Language Paper 2: Mon 12th June
Title: Hobson and McCarley Vs Freud
Reading Response Journals
Choose any two items (not people) in the room and write a conversation between them. Use techniques effectively to create a powerful image in the readers’
How Common is Biographical Context in Writing?
Paper 1: Tues 6th June GCSE English Language Paper 2: Mon 12th June
Paper 2 Literature Essay.
Analyzing Kafka You will need a piece of paper and something to write with for the assignment today. You will also want your reading notes out to help.
Presentation transcript:

Scavenger Hunt: J. Allan Hobson’s Dreaming: An Introduction to the Science of Sleep I’ll display a question or task. The first student to come up with an answer gets a piece of candy; answers must include page numbers and must be accurate and thorough. If nobody comes up with an answer within three minutes, I’ll give you page numbers. After that, the same rules apply. A second student must find a way to make a connection to Freud, Jung, or Hartmann. Possible connections include: noting similarities, noting differences, noting analogous ideas described in different language, etc. This student also gets a piece of candy. At the end, the student with the most candy gets a whole bag. It’s up to this student whether to share!

The Questions and Tasks F ind two references to Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and explain why you think Hobson uses them.

The Questions and Tasks Find two references to Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and explain why you think Hobson uses them. Explain the difference, according to Hobson, between dream form and dream content.

The Questions and Tasks Find two references to Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and explain why you think Hobson uses them. Explain the difference, according to Hobson, between dream form and dream content. Find a moment when Freud is criticized indirectly.

The Questions and Tasks Find two references to Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and explain why you think Hobson uses them. Explain the difference, according to Hobson, between dream form and dream content. Find a moment when Freud is criticized indirectly. Define isomorphism.

The Questions and Tasks Find two references to Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and explain why you think Hobson uses them. Explain the difference, according to Hobson, between dream form and dream content. Find a moment when Freud is criticized indirectly. Define isomorphism. Find a moment when Freud is praised.

The Questions and Tasks Find two references to Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and explain why you think Hobson uses them. Explain the difference, according to Hobson, between dream form and dream content. Find a moment when Freud is criticized indirectly. Define isomorphism. Find a moment when Freud is praised. Explain the “activation-synthesis” theory of dreaming.

The Questions and Tasks Find two references to Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and explain why you think Hobson uses them. Explain the difference, according to Hobson, between dream form and dream content. Find a moment when Freud is criticized indirectly. Define isomorphism. Find a moment when Freud is praised. Explain the “activation-synthesis” theory of dreaming. What is the Dream Journal of the Engine Man?

The Questions and Tasks Find two references to Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and explain why you think Hobson uses them. Explain the difference, according to Hobson, between dream form and dream content. Find a moment when Freud is criticized indirectly. Define isomorphism. Find a moment when Freud is praised. Explain the “activation-synthesis” theory of dreaming. What is the Dream Journal of the Engine Man? What form of “psychosis” does dreaming resemble most?

The Questions and Tasks Find two references to Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and explain why you think Hobson uses them. Explain the difference, according to Hobson, between dream form and dream content. Find a moment when Freud is criticized indirectly. Define isomorphism. Find a moment when Freud is praised. Explain the “activation-synthesis” theory of dreaming. What is the Dream Journal of the Engine Man? What form of “psychosis” does dreaming resemble most? Define phenomenology.

The Questions and Tasks Find two references to Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and explain why you think Hobson uses them. Explain the difference, according to Hobson, between dream form and dream content. Find a moment when Freud is criticized indirectly. Define isomorphism. Find a moment when Freud is praised. Explain the “activation-synthesis” theory of dreaming. What is the Dream Journal of the Engine Man? What form of “psychosis” does dreaming resemble most? Define phenomenology. What are some differences between NREM dreams and REM dreams?

The Questions and Tasks Find two references to Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and explain why you think Hobson uses them. Explain the difference, according to Hobson, between dream form and dream content. Find a moment when Freud is criticized indirectly. Define isomorphism. Find a moment when Freud is praised. Explain the “activation-synthesis” theory of dreaming. What is the Dream Journal of the Engine Man? What form of “psychosis” does dreaming resemble most? Define phenomenology. What are some differences between NREM dreams and REM dreams? Whose research suggests dreaming may play a role in memory consolidation?

The Questions and Tasks Find two references to Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and explain why you think Hobson uses them. Explain the difference, according to Hobson, between dream form and dream content. Find a moment when Freud is criticized indirectly. Define isomorphism. Find a moment when Freud is praised. Explain the “activation-synthesis” theory of dreaming. What is the Dream Journal of the Engine Man? What form of “psychosis” does dreaming resemble most? Define phenomenology. What are some differences between NREM dreams and REM dreams? Whose research suggests dreaming may play a role in memory consolidation? What two predecessors did Freud “ignore”?

Groups Hasina, Sara, Brett Jocelyn, Michael, Serenei Chris, Elyse, Joanne Danabelle, Alison, Eileen Fotini, Kathleen, Shane, Melissa

Franz Kafka

1883 – 1924; born in Prague (now Czech Republic); died of tuberculosis (in Vienna, Freud’s city!) Kafkaesque: Kafka’s writing often used to describe moments in real life that are bizarre, nightmarish, Byzantine, or drowning in bureaucracy. Wrote fantastical fiction, often with philosophical or political overtones: Meditation (including “Children on a Country Road”; 1913), The Metamorphosis (1915), “The Judgment” (1916), In the Penal Colony (1919), “A Country Doctor” (1919), The Trial (1925). In his journal, Kafka wrote “Thoughts about Freud, naturally” to describe what he was thinking about when he wrote “The Judgment.”

Franz Kafka A Case Study for Using Dream Theory to Interpret Literature J. Allan Hobson asks the following questions about the relationship between memory and sleep (p. 129): 1.As declarative memory (memory that results from conscious awareness and associations) depends so strongly on an intact hippocampus, are our daytime experiences temporarily stored there for further processing? 2.Are bits of declarative memory, but not entire scenarios, transferred out of the hippocampus when the brain is reactivated in REM sleep?

Dreams and Literary Interpretation We might ask equivalent questions with regard to the relationship between dreams and literary interpretation: 1.How do nonlinear narratives represent the world differently from linear ones? Might dream interpretation offer some clues about how to find meaning in nonlinear narratives? 2.Does the act of reading share anything with dreaming? 3.Does the act of writing share anything with dreaming? 4.What are some of the ways a powerful work of literature might affect the psyche of a reader? Might the study of dreams offer any clues? 5.Why do so many writers draw on dreams in their work—either explicitly (as in a story or poem that includes literal dreams) or implicitly (as in a story or poem that seems to borrow from dream logics or aesthetics)? In your groups, choose one of these questions, or come up with one of your own. Find a passage in one of Kafka’s stories that might be used as evidence to address this question. Then, come up with an idea from one of the dream theories we’ve read that helps you understand this passage in relation to your question. See if you can offer an answer (keeping in mind that it will be tentative—not definitive).