Vanessa Dybes, Francisco Soltero, Arthur Yang, Adoria Hamilton, Guillermo & Enrique Sanchez. The Devil and Tom Walker.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Devil and Tom Walker
Advertisements

Requirements for an MLA Research Paper It is a research paper that you write with information you collect from several sources. You write it by following.
American Romanticism Early 1800s -1865
Part 1. Washington Irving ( )
Unit #3 Romantic and Gothic Literature. Romanticism A movement away from thinking and reasoning, instead the writing focuses on feelings and gut instincts.
The Power of Darkness (Gothic View). Imagination is the key to Romanticism (author’s personality) Imagination is the key to Romanticism (author’s personality)
The Devil and Tom Walker Washington Irving. From New York City From New York City Had a talent for creating fictional narrators Had a talent for creating.
“ The Devil and Tom Walker”
The Devil and Tom Walker
The Devil.
“THE DEVIL AND TOM WALKER” BY WASHINGTON IRVING CHARACTERIZATION REFERS TO THE METHODS A WRITER USES TO REVEAL THE PERSONALITY OF A CHARACTER.
THE DEVIL & TOM WALKER pgs Washington Irving.
American Literature Unit 3
  The story takes place a few miles from Boston, Massachusetts.  There is treasure buried in the swampy area by Charles Bay. It was buried by Kidd.
The Devil and Tom Walker
The Devil and Tom Walker
The Devil & Tom Walker Group Assignment.
Start-Up – Partner Talk With your partner, discuss the common phrase, “Making a deal with the Devil.” Have you heard this phrase before? Where? What does.
American Romanticism Was life after the Revolution boring?
Symbolism in “The Devil and Tom Walker”
WASHINGTON IRVING ( ).
Historical Context Industrial Revolution
Washington Irving Beginnings…  Named after the 1 st American president  Born into a wealthy family  Began studying law at 16, but was more.
Unit Question: How do values, attitudes and choices impact one’s life and others in the community? How do values, attitudes and choices impact one’s life.
English 11. Today’s Agenda 1. Warm-UP 2. Big Idea #3 – The Darker Side of Human Nature 3. “The Devil and Tom Walker” pp. 228+
Washington Irving. Washington Irving ( )  DOB: April 3 New York  World traveler—England, France, Sweden, etc.  One of his most famous short.
 Industrial Revolution  Abolitionist Movement  Follows Age of Reason: most literature was instructional, about truth and values (Franklin, Jefferson,
Romanticism An American Literary movement that elevated the individual, the passions, and the inner life. It stressed strong emotion, imagination, freedom.
Romanticism The Dark Romantics Celebrated the individual, human emotions, and the imagination Celebrated the individual, human emotions, and the imagination.
Washington Irving. * * First international literary celebrity of the U.S. * Humorist and satirist (satire: literature that mocks and scorns).
ELEMENTS OF LITERATURE SETTING Prepared by Linda Eder Hazelwood Central HIgh School Teacher information Proceed to slide show.
Romanticism “We will walk on our own feet; we will work with our own hands; we will speak with our own minds…A nation of men will for the first.
WASHINGTON IRVING Father of American Fiction.  He made short fiction popular  He was the first to write prose meant for entertainment  He made stories.
Sight Words.
P. 318 The Devil and Tom Walker by Washington Irving.
Washington Irving “The Devil and Tom Walker”;“The Devil and Tom Walker”; “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow”; “Rip Van Winkle” First American writer to achieve.
Named after George Washington He was the first American writer to achieve international recognition.
Questions: The Devil and Tom Walker. 1. What happened to Kidd the pirate and his treasure? He was hanged for piracy His treasure was left buried and lost.
The Devil and Tom Walker BY: WASHINGTON IRVING. The Gist: On his way home one night, Tom Walker takes a shortcut through a swamp where he meets the Devil.
Background Information: “The Devil & Tom Walker” The Romantic Hero & Archetypal Characters.
Before 1-1 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. To read and analyze a short story about the consequences of a man’s.
American Romanticism & Washington Irving American Romanticism  Time: from the end of the 18th century to the outbreak of the Civil War  (2)Reasons.
“A Growing Nation” We will walk with our own feet we will work with our own hands we will speak our own minds -Ralph Waldo Emerson.
Rip Van Winkle 김아름 장경임 조윤정.
Lesson 32.
Unit #3 Romantic and Gothic Literature Main Theme: Change is necessary for growth; life events and society can change a person’s perspective.
Washington Irving “I am always at a loss to know how much to believe of my own stories.” (from Tales of a Traveler, 1824)
Rip Van Winkle Washington Irving.
American Romanticism Lima English 11 Honors.
Symbolism in The Devil and Tom Walker
Washington Irving ( ) Born into a middle-class American family
Writers, Eras, and Literary Devices Review
The Story of the Times
Romanticism Literary Period
“The Devil and tom walker” by Washington irving
The Devil and Tom Walker
rebellion against society
The Devil and Tom Walker
The Devil and Tom Walker
Hunter, Mitchell, and Matthew Johnson
The Devil and Tom Walker
LITERARY MOVEMENTS What are they?.
The Devil and Tom Walker
Washington Irving ( ) Born into a middle-class American family
Washington Irving ( ) The Sketch Book (1819) contains 32 stories two best stories: “Rip Van Winkle” and “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow”** Plots.
Romanticism An Introduction.
Washington Irving
The Devil and Tom Walker
Presentation transcript:

Vanessa Dybes, Francisco Soltero, Arthur Yang, Adoria Hamilton, Guillermo & Enrique Sanchez. The Devil and Tom Walker

What moral lesson can you infer was used to teach people with this legend during the author’s time? Essential Question

Building Background In "The Devil and Tom Walker", Irving adapted the Germanic legend of Johann Faust, a 16th century magician and alchemist who was said to have sold his soul to the devil in exchange of worldly power and wealth. Irving created an American character who strikes the same bargain and faces the same consequences but in an American setting.It takes place in the outskirts of Boston in the early 1700s; when the Puritans still dominated Massachusetts society.

About Washington Irving ( ) ●Born at the end of American Revolution and named after our first president. ●Influenced other writers like Nathaniel Hawthorne ●Pioneered the short story as a literary form ●Growing up in a large prosperous New York Family, Irving came to learn and appreciate literature, art, theater, and opera. ●Considered painting as a career but used his talent to write about the American landscapes he knew so well. ●Spent much of his life abroad. ●Author of “Rip Van Winkle” & “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow”

Near a swamp in 1727, a man named Tom Walker comes across the remains of an old Indian fortification and discovers a tomahawk still buried in it. Tom kicks the skull and then meets the devil. The devil offers Tom the buried gold of the pirate Kidd on certain conditions (his soul). Tom shares his secret with his greedy wife, who sets off to bargain for the gold herself, but she disappears and is never seen again. Tom ends up accepting the deal with the devil and later in his life regrets it. He becomes aggressively religious in an attempt to escape his fate. The devil takes Tom’s soul and reduces his fortune to ashes. Summary

● Promoted individuality, emotion, love and nature. ● Puritans-person’s life should be devoted to God. ● Tom resists change at first but gives in to greed.(anti-puritanistic). ● Devil (supernatural): offers answers to the couple’s problems o appeal to their imagination and desires o real world cannot offer these answers. Romanticism

Imagery is words and phrases that appeal to the five senses, helping you to imagine precisely what people, places, and events in a literary works are like. Irving provides a description in “The Devil and Tom Walker” so an understanding of the imagery is crucial to an understanding of the story-and to an enjoyment of its humor. Specifically on the images of the Forlorn house, the straggling trees, and the starved horse to show you just how miserly Tom and his wife are. Thematic Elements:

“Like most short cuts, it was an ill chosen route. The swamp was thickly grown with great gloomy pines and hemlocks, some of them ninety feet high; which made it dark at noonday, and a retreat for all the owls of the neighbourhood. It was full of pits and quagmires, partly covered with weeds and mosses; where the green surface often betrayed the traveller into a gulf of black smothering mud; there were also dark and stagnant pools, the abodes of the tadpole, the bull-frog, and the water snake, and where trunks of pines and hemlocks lay half drowned, half rotting, looking like alligators, sleeping in the mire.” ( ) Imagery and Visualization

● Shortcut home=shortcut to wealth ● Ill chosen route ● Cost: eternal damnation ● Symbolizes the wrong path Swamp

Allegory: literary device where characters, objects and plot represent an idea. Devil=temptation Tom & wife=greed Bible=chance for salvation; left under mortgages. Symbolism

●What is a “Faust Legend”- German legend about a protagonist named Faust. A scholar who is highly successful but not satisfied with his life, and makes a pact with the Devil by exchanging his soul for unlimited knowledge and worldly pleasures. ●Words to know ○ Abode(n)- A dwelling place or home. ○ Repose(v)- To rest or relax. ○ Daunted(adj)- Intimidated or frightened. ○ Propitious(adj)- Helpful or advantageous; favorable. ○ Ostentation(n)- display meant to impress others; boastful showiness ○ Melancholy(adj) gloomy; sad Vocabulary

● A) Abode1) Gloomy; sad ● B) Daunted2) To rest or relax ● C) Melancholy 3) Helpful or advantageous; favorable ● D) Propitious4) A dwelling place or home ● E) Repose5) Intimidated or frightened Vocab Mix: match the vocab

1.What kind of atmosphere did the beginning of the story have? 2.What does Old Scratch offer Tom and what does he want in return? 3.How does the word ‘Ostentation’(357) relate the story? 4.What kind of deal does Tom Walker make with the Devil? 5.What were the different names of the Devil? 6.What happened to Tom Walker in the end? 7.When looking for his wife, what did he find instead? 8.How did Tom Walker change throughout the story? 9.How does Tom try to get out of his bargain? Comprehension Questions