Christopher Castillo 4 th Period 9/21/11-9/28/11.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
How do teen magazines promote ideology?
Advertisements

and Mr. Hyde Discussion Point: Imagine being able to drink a beverage that would literally turn you into a different personwith different looks, a different.
CHAPTER 20. SO DOES SEASON Lance Kloves Mrs.Geach September 28, 2011.
A Christmas Carol. Scrooge was a cold, hard man. All he cared about was money. He didn’t like people and he hated Christmas. On a Christmas Eve, his dead.
Laura Salvador September 28, 2011 Period: 4. When a Character gets Wet… Rebirth: the character can be reborn after submersion, leaving his/her old self.
Kristen Smit, Julianna Leyendekker, Ashlyn De Groot Gilgamesh.
How to Read Literature Like A Professor
Comparing Marley & Scrooge. The same things about Marley and Scrooge * The same things about Marley and Scrooge are they used to work together and where.
Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol
Brett Bordonaro 3rd  In the beginning of the chapter, the author talks about actually comprehending what you are reading. He states that when.
B ENJAMIN Y ANG H OW T O R EAD L ITERATURE L IKE A P ROFESSOR C HAPTER 22: H E ’ S BLIND FOR A REASON, YOU KNOW Period 4 9/21/11.
Nice to Eat You: Acts of Vampires Elena Milby, Mary Ivie, Shelby England, Justin Deppe.
Warming up & listening. Turn to page 55, look at the pic- tures and describe what you see: Picture 1: a young man and a young woman at a dinner table.
Chapter 8 Hanseldee and Greteldum
 they were both visited by 3 ghost past,present and future.  They both still have much To learn  They are the same people in the story a Christmas.
Chapter 3 Nice to Eat You: Acts of Lucia Zhan 6 th period 9/21/11.
HTRLLAP Chapter 6: When in Doubt, It’s from Shakespeare…
A Christmas Carol Introduction. What do you usually do at Christmas? Decorating a Christmas tree? Singing Christmas carols? Sending Christmas cards?
 Webster’s unabridged 2 nd edition- a woman who tempts or entices; especially sexually.  Urban dictionary.com- a woman who is considered to be dangerously.
A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens fiction. The Main Characters The main characters in this book is Scrooge, Bob Marley, and the three ghosts of Christmas.
Anum Jabbar Period 4 th 10/25/11 EDGAR ALLAN POE.
A Christmas Carol Novel by Charles Dickens, Play by Frederick Gaines Images and Discussion Questions English 7/7H Mrs. Gennosa.
The Life of Charles Dickens Dickens was born in London, England on February 7, When he was 12, his father was jailed for not being able to pay his.
Charles Dickens Feb 7, 1812 – June 9, 1870.
 Authors use religion as a theme, that is commonly accepted, to relate to subjects such as: › Death › Loss of Innocence › Biblical Titles › Real Life.
By: Bryce Pilkey. Author  This book was written by Charles Dickens. He was an author of the 19 th century.
HTRLLAP. The author of this passage describes Scrooge as a person so evil that the character is almost unbelievable. Dear Old Scrooge When People read.
The Wonderful World of Literature Yes, it is wonderful. Well, 100% of interesting and intelligent people find it wonderful. What does that say about you?
HOW TO READ LITERATURE LIKE A PROFESSOR CHAPTERS 2 AND 3: COMMUNION AND VAMPIRES.
 Violence is an act that causes harm to someone. The harm can be physical or mental. Physical harm includes wounds and injuries, while mental harm is.
Show us what we are made for Expresses the spirit we live by:
Per. 4 9/21/11. Shape  What do you think when you see some one that doesn’t follow the regular human form?  You may laugh and joke about them, you may.
Review Setting What do you want to know? Characters.
I T ’ S A LL P OLITICAL C HAPTER 13 Keana Madrinan Geach 3 9/20/11.
15 TH C HAPTER F LIGHTS OF F ANCY Jevh Maravilla Period 6.
Charles Dickens 19 th Century English Author. The Early Years… Born February 7, 1812 He attended school till the age of 9. He had to stop going to school.
CHARLES DICKENS Charles Dickens is a very important and famous English writer . He is the most popular novelist of his time. He lived and wrote in.
Hero or villain? Charles dickens is a hero because…… He made Christmas as we know it by writing books like Christmas carol. He is one of the most famous.
A Christmas Carol A Christmas Carol Reading and Literature 8 -- Munnier.
September 23, 2013 AP Literature. Vocabulary for the Week Tone Words  Celebratory  Gleeful  Mournful  Earnest  ghoulish Literary Devices  Allegory.
How to Read Literature Like a Professor Chapter 20 So Does Season… By: Bryce Holmes 3 rd Period September 28, 2011.
Chapter 21: Marked For Greatness Dillon Junkin 9/28/11 Geach 6.
 In the passage “He’s blind for a reason, you know” The author is trying to show how blind we really are when we read and when we go through life. We.
How to Read Literature Like a Professor by Thomas C. Foster A Lively and Entertaining Guide to Reading Between the Lines Review Chapters 3, 4 & 5.
A Christmas Carol By Charles Dickens Chapter 1. 1/4/2016 Free template from 2 Prediction Identification Which prediction would not.
Charles Dickens- Hero or Villain? By Maisie Charles Dickens is a hero because……….. He told the public about the way children were being treated, through.
A Christmas Carol Introduction
A Christmas Carol Taylor Brown Sydney Barloon Angie Espinoza Avery Williams.
Open-Ended Responses. 1. Background Information 2. Restate the Question 3. Answer the Question 4. Support your answer with evidence from the story 5.
Turning Introductions into Conclusions
Please Do Now  Welcome back!!  Take out the following papers:  Scrooge’s personality traits organizer  Theme organizer  Make sure you have a writing.
Guided Comprehension Questions
Old Testament Man Gave Names to All The Animals By: Bob Dylan Man Gave Names to All The Animals By: Bob Dylan.
Dickens and A Christmas Carol. What is a drama? Characteristics? How do you know? What can dramas tell us that books cannot?
Charles John Huffam Dickens was an English writer and social critic. He created some of the world's most well-known fictional characters and is generally.
RESPECT  What is it? (Synonyms)  What isn’t it? (Antonyms)  Where would you find it?  Who or what does it remind you of?
Ghosts Stories. Index 1. The author 2. THE CONFESSION OF CHARLES LINKWORTH 2.1 Characters 2.1 Characters 2.2 Plot 2.2 Plot 3. Personal opinion.
MONSTERS. Monsters in History Classical mythology boasts many monsters.
Dickens was one of the greatest of all English writers, and A Christmas Carol shows his writing at its best. In all of his books, he spoke out against.
How to Read Literature Like a Professor By: Lamar Butler.
Before the Factory Acts, working conditions in factories were extremely brutal. Factories were noisy, dangerous, and unsanitary as owners cared little.
CHAPTER 3 Nice to Eat You: Acts of Vampires
A Christmas carol.
A CHRISTMAS CAROL -BY CHARLES DICKENS
Monsters in Literature
Nice to Eat You: Acts of Vampires
CHARLES DICKENS Charles Dickens is a very important and famous English writer . He is the most popular novelist of his time. He lived and wrote in.
Charles Dickens.
Politics (Olive Senior Article)
Gothic Characters.
Presentation transcript:

Christopher Castillo 4 th Period 9/21/11-9/28/11

Vampires are only the beginning Just taking out a single preposition with from “nice to eat with you” makes the simple statement much darker and more mysterious. This is a quote that I’m sure is common to many vampire books of Old English like Dracula. Likes that a big deal, who hasn’t, “But vampires are only the beginning; not only that they’re not even the most alarming type.” (Foster 15).

What is evil? What truly is evil? The Dracula saga shows a young man who robs young women of their “usefulness” to young men and leaves them as helpless followers in his sin. Looking at it closely, “Evil has had to do with sex the serpent seduced Eve” (Foster 16). Evil is just body shame, unwholesome lust, seduction, temptation, danger, among other things.

So vampirism isn’t about vampires? Vampirism is about vampires, but it’s also about other kinds than literal vampirism: “…selfishness, exploitation, a refusal to respect the autonomy of other people…” (Foster 16) those are just some examples. This principle applies to a lot of other scary things such as ghosts and doppelgangers.

Ghosts aren’t just for scaring Have you noticed that not all ghosts are there to cause harm? Look at Bob Marley in Dickens’s A Christmas Carol, he’s was just a wailing, clanking example that was there to help steer Scrooge right. In Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde it shows a respectable man of society with a darker more sinister half. Many examples like these can be found by Victorian writers because “Victorians couldn’t write about…chiefly sex and sexuality…found ways to of transforming those taboo subjects and issues into other forms” (Foster 17). Writers will still use all the werewolves, vampires, and evil twins to symbolize various aspect of our more common reality. Try this for a dictum, ghosts and vampires are never only about ghosts and vampires

What makes a vampire A vampire isn’t just an blood- sucking demon sent to spread disarray our world. A vampire is just an old man who steals the youth, energy, and virtue of an young woman, preferably virginal; that all contributes to male’s life force and destroys or kills the female. If you don’t know it yet, “You don’t need fangs and a cape to be a vampire” (Foster 19).

Vampires today Today vampire stories are “mere gothic cheap trill…short- term commodities” (Foster 21). Many vampire stories are like that and aren't and embedded in your mind as the story of Dracula and other great Victorian author’s stories.

How this applies to GE In Great Expectations the vampirism process is reversed as in Pip is the “young woman” and Estella is the “older man.” Pip’s unhealthy obsession over Estella made him plunge into a hole and after a while it sent him in a staggering debt of “’Hundred and twenty-three pound, fifteen, six. Jeweller’s account…’” Dickens 362).

How this applies to life It applies to every person on the planet, there are those who have that unhealthy obsession for someone and it becomes their demise in some way, just like Pip. Wall street is another example, the stock holders don't care if their investors lose money, as long as they profit. Vampirism will stay with us for all eternity until we as humans stop exploiting each other.

 Dickens, Charles. Great Expectations. New York: Dover Publications, Print. Foster, Thomas C. How to Read Literature Like a Professor. New York: Harper- Collins Publishers, Inc., Print.