Kelso High School English Department. Chapter Nine.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Beauty and the Beast By Heather Huntrods Exposition Once upon a time there was a girl named Belle. Belle lived with her father, Maurice, who was a merchant.
Advertisements

Understanding the grieving process helps you cope with loss and manage your feelings in healthy ways.
Kelso High School English Department. Chapter Thirteen.
Kelso High School English Department. ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’
The Lovely Bones By: Sammie Beech.
Kelso High School English Department. Chapter Eleven.
Friendships & Relationships
Kelso High School English Department. Chapter Fifteen.
Kelso High School English Department. Chapter Fourteen.
Kelso High School English Department. Prose text:
10 Key Episodes Within The Lovely Bones
Acknowledging Loss Kelly has always been close to her grandfather. Every weekend they would spend time together,
Kelso High School English Department. Chapter Two.
Coping With Loss/Grieving. Bummer Day I wanted to bring some comic relief into today’s Lesson before we begin! With Halloween tomorrow, and us talking.
Keeper Holly Goldberg Sloan 146 pages Date Began Reading-10/25/05 Date Finished Reading- 10/27/05 Keeper by Holly G. Sloan.
Character and Setting.
Symbolism Below are the Monopoly pieces used by the Salmon family. What could they symbolise/tell us about the character who uses them? Lindsey – the iron.
Notice and Note Signposts
The great gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald.
The Pigman Book by: Paul Zindel PowerPoint by Victoria Tran.
Alice and her family had just moved from London to Manchester. She had already visited her new school but on her first day, she was feeling quite scared.
Unity in Paragraphs. A. Unity: It means that all the sentences refer to the main idea, or the topic of the paragraph. Exercise 1: The original student.
One important and obvious realization when thinking about death is that death is inevitable. The time death will come is uncertain, but that it will arrive.
My Personal Reading Of The Fox Dean Cristina IV A
Coping with Loss and Grief
Searching For The Murphy Diamond Slide by, Riley Krudop This Whole Slide-Show Was Created By Riley Krudop And Annie Cleaver.
Chapter Three By: Cheryll Walla, Michelle Yip, Pravin Khaira.
By : Charity Carter Title: The Pilot’s Wife Author: Anita Shreve Publisher: Little Brown and Company Year of Publication:1999.
Charlotte`s Web This book certainly won`t leave you hanging, but it will make you blood thirsty for more! By E.B. White This book certainly won`t leave.
Lovely Bones Alma Lucas, Wendy Correa,
Chapter 4: Section 3-pg. 89. Examples of loss can include death of a family member, the divorce of one’s parents, the death of a pet, a breakup with a.
Kelso High School English Department. Bones In today’s lesson we will: Analyse Bones in relation to: Plot Key Incident One: Harvey’s Death Key Incident.
Kelso High School English Department. Chapter Twenty Three.
SAFE: Stop Abuse for Everyone A personal safety training guide for adults with disabilities and care providers Module 4: Sexual Abuse 1.
My Novel My Novel By: Alexis Johnson. About My Book The name of my book is, “The Earth, My Butt, and Other Big Round Things. The author of my book is.
The story Go Ask Alice is a diary of a teenager girl. She is just a regular girl in high school. In the beginning, Alice finds out that her family is.
Wonder By: Abigail Rowlands
Kelso High School English Department. Chapter Six.
Plot What’s Happening?. What Is Plot? Plot is the series of related events in a story or play. The plot is sometimes called the story line. A plot has.
Please ensure you finish the book over half term.
Discussing topics speaking class. Answer What did you bring with you to school today? When you are visited to a friend’s house, do you usually take something?
How does Brooks present Alex in the novel? You should comment on: What she does and what happened to her The methods Brooks uses to present her.
Kelso High School English Department. Chapter Five.
Questions raised while reading “Dr. Heidegger’s Experiment” By Nathaniel Hawthorne.
Harcourt Journeys: Story Selection Copyright © 2011 Kelly Mott.
American Author (specializing in teenage life experiences). Graduated from UNC- Chapel Hill with highest honors in Creative Writing. All 10 of her books.
Journal 9/28/15 “Grief is the normal and natural emotional reaction to loss or change of any kind.” How are grief and stress related?
Kelso High School English Department. ‘An Inspector Calls’
Chapter 8 The Hunger Games - Chapter Summaries. Chapter 8  As soon as she leaves Katniss begins to panic, wondering if the Gamemakers will punish her.
Kelso High School English Department. Chapter Twenty Two.
Harcourt Journeys: Story Selection Copyright © 2011 Kelly Mott.
Kelso High School English Department. “Chapter Seventeen”
Kelso High School English Department. Chapter Twenty One.
The Hunger Games - Chapter Summaries Summaries adapted from
My Brother Martin: Part 1: Interactive PowerPoint with Guided Reading Questions Part 2: Projectable 2.3 a Part 3: Projectable 2.4 Copyright © 2011 Kelly.
The Great Gatsby: Chapter 7 Analysis
Writing Longer How to turn your reading jots from short to long.
Characterization. I. Character Definition: the people, animals, or creatures Major Character: The most important characters in a story Minor Character:
Death of a Student: Navigating a School through Grief Samuel J. Smith, Ed.D. ACSI Convention Raleigh, NC ~ 2011.
Len’s back in his fifteen
Character and Setting.
Characterization.
FILM/TV Writing Week 9.
Among the Hidden Chapters
Characterization.
TV/Film Writing Week 5.
We all know traditional tales well, but what would happen if we changed the ending of a well known tale?
Character and Setting.
Presentation transcript:

Kelso High School English Department

Chapter Nine

In today’s lesson we will: Analyse chapter nine of the text in relation to: plot characterisation theme: Grief and Loss theme: Growing Up / Coming of Age theme: Isolation symbolism

Plot Discuss briefly with your partner the main events of chapter nine. Check that your chapter summary notes include all relevant information.

Characterisation: Grandma Lynn When Grandmother Lynn arrives in Chapter Nine, the reader is amazed by the eccentricity and richness of this new important figure. Re-read pages What are your first impressions of Lynn and what do you think helped you to form these impressions?

Characterisation: Grandma Lynn Discussion points: What impression of Grandma Lynn are we given by her description of her “thick and fabulous animal”? 2. “She was, in all her obnoxious finery…” 3. Describe the relationship between Abigail and Lynn. 4. What do we learn about Grandma Lynn by the inclusion of the detail that she went to the memorial without make up on?

Characterisation: Grandma Lynn Grandmother Lynn does everything bad: she drinks too much, she tries to get her granddaughters to use drugs to stay thin, she is overbearing and obnoxious, but as Susie notes, when she arrives at their house, she brings the light back in. She makes Abigail sit down after dinner and uses her “bag o’magic” (makeup) to do a makeover. She also agrees to teach Lindsey about makeup.

Characterisation: Grandma Lynn Even Jack comes in to watch and talks to Lindsey about her friend, Clarissa, who is hanging around Brian Nelson, a bad influence. Grandmother Lynn is so intuitive about her family that she even knows that Lindsey has a boyfriend. She then proceeds to make Lindsey look like “a grade-A ‘tute,” while she and Jack get happily sloshed. In heaven, Susie suddenly likes Grandma Lynn.

Importance of Grandma Lynn Grandma Lynn is exactly what the family needs to help them begin to live again. She pushes them to face reality, somehow finding a way through their grief.

Characterisation: Lindsey Grandma Lynn gives Lindsey a makeover that helps her separate herself from her dead sister. Later, Lindsey stares at the face Grandma Lynn has created in the mirror in her bedroom. Susie knows that her sister is beginning to see something different: an adult, who can take care of herself.

Characterisation: Lindsey She also sees the edges of her features delineated, sitting on “her face like gems imported from some far-off place where the colors were richer than the colors in our house had ever been.”

Characterisation: Lindsey When Mr Harvey locks eyes with Lindsey, she passes out, because subconsciously, she must know her father is right. This foreshadows her willingness later to help her father search Harvey’s house.

Characterisation: Mr Harvey Mr. Harvey’s appearance at the memorial is the most arrogance he shown since Mr. Salmon began to suspect him.

Theme: Growing Up / Coming of Age Grandma Lynn is exactly what the family needs to help them begin to live again. She pushes them to face reality, somehow finding a way through their grief. Susie’s memory of Mrs. Utemeyer is related, because her only sense of dead people, before she herself dies, is Mrs. Utemeyer’s body at the funeral home. She suddenly sees her as a real person who grieved for her daughter who died as a young girl.

Theme: Growing Up/ Coming of Age Later, Lindsey stares at the face Grandma Lynn has created in the mirror in her bedroom. Susie knows that her sister is beginning to see something different: an adult, who can take care of herself.

Theme: Isolation The wedge that Susie’s death has placed in her parents’ relationship is all too apparent by the fact that Jack aches for Abigail when she’s asleep, but can’t even look at her when they are awake. The fact that he thinks of the memorial as “an honest day “ indicates that the family is being dishonest with themselves, especially he and Abigail. This is further emphasised by Susie who comments that her father tells an “odd” lie when he tells Clarissa that he and Abigail are doing fine.

Theme: Grief and Loss Abigail has finally entered the second stage of grief when she focuses on Clarissa for being alive while Susie is not. Fortunately, Clarissa doesn’t comment on the dress Lindsey is wearing which, no doubt, prevents Abigail’s anger from spilling out.

Symbolism : Bag O’ Magic Grandmother Lynn’s bag of makeup represents a respite from the grief of Susie’s death.

Symbolism: Susie’s bedroom For every member of her family, this symbolises a place where she is still alive.

Symbolism: Funeral A funeral is a symbolic demarcation, a time when the community lets go of the deceased and, ideally, the dead person moves on. Susie’s funeral also marks other things specific to this family. Both the police and Susie's killer attend the funeral, marking it as unfinished and unnatural.

The End!