Donovan Chew Pd.2 05-2-12.  Setting (Time): Late 1960’s and Late 1980’s  Setting (Place): Primarily Vietnam  Conflicts: The Men of the Alpha Company,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Style Analysis--Diction Weeds & Roses. Weed #1--Answer the Prompt! Reread the prompt: –Discuss the authors use of diction in the short story From a Window.
Advertisements

The Things They Carried Written by: Tim OBrien Cylivia Lee.
Things They Carried and Love Enemies & Friends.
All Quiet on the Western Front
The Things They Carried Tim O’Brien. “How To Tell A True War Story” This chapter really blurs the distinction between truth and fiction. O’Brien immediately.
Characters: Initial Incident : The draft notice arrived on June 17, It is the initial incident of the story which causes Tim to have all.
How is the Unreal used to make sense of the Real in The Things They Carried?
Professor Poyner-Del Vento. Kindly turn off All cell phones The wireless component of any laptop computers.
Rat Kiley and The man Tim 0’Brien killed
The Things They Carried
Who is “The Scarlet Ibis”? “ Everybody thought he was going to die”
The Things They Carried
“The Things They Carried,” “What Were They Like?” and “Facing It”
Annabel Lee By Edgar Allan Poe
Elements of a Short Story
English 2 Short Stories Unit Overview and Literary Terms Definitions.
Elements of the Short Story Mrs. Robilotto. Characterization A technique employed by the writer to create and reveal the personalities of characters DIRECT:
Chapters 5&6 analysis. Recall: The chapter is broken up into two short stories. Tim O’Brien uses this literary technique to once again demonstrate the.
SPIN. Changing Narrative Gears SPIN IS ONE OF THE MOST INTERESTING SECTIONS OF THE BOOK, AS IT SWINGS FROM DETAILS ABOUT SEVERAL OF THE SIGNIFICANT CHARACTERS,
Elements of Fiction Plot and Conflict Plot: is what happens in a story. –Plot contains: Basic situation Conflict Series of Events Climax Resolution.
ELEMENTS AND TECHNIQUES Literary Terms. Short Story A work of fiction that can be read in one sitting. 1 or 2 major characters and 1 major conflict. Tells.
MINI LESSONS FOR THE OUTSIDERS
Story Literary Elements Some basics that every good story must have ….
The Things They Carried
ALLUSION A passing reference to historical or fictional characters, places, or events, or to other works that the writer assumes the reader will recognize.
Author Author: Tim O’ Brien Born 1946 Inspired by his own father’s written accounts of battles like Iwo Jima and Okinawa during WWII. O’Brien also became.
Whole Class Review Activity Directions: The class will form eight groups, each consisting of four students (class has 32 students enrolled). Each group,
Story Literary Elements Some basics that every good story must have ….
PLOT DIAGRAM Characterization is the process by which the writer reveals the personality of a character. Characterization is revealed through direct.
The Things They Carried Tim O’Brien. About the Author ► Born Oct. 1, 1946 in MN ► His father fought in WWII  Inspired O’Brien to become a writer ► Attended.
Journal Author Tim O ’ Brien begins his novel The Things They Carried with a list of items that the soldiers carry, both physical and intangible.
MENTAL HEALTH: Dealing With Emotions Ms. Mai Lawndale High School.
Journal Author Tim O’Brien begins his novel The Things They Carried with a list of items that the soldiers carry, both physical and intangible.
Short Story Unit. We are going to learn about the elements of short stories, story genres, and techniques for writing short stories. You will use this.
The Things They Carried From “The Man I Killed” to “The Lives of the Dead”
Theme 1: The Things They Carried “He carried a strobe light and the responsibility for the lives of his men.”
Themes in T.T.T.C. Literally, the “things” the men carried; physically and emotionally, but mostly emotionally The nature of “storytelling” and all that.
The Things They Carried Tim O’Brien. Test Review 65 total points 65 total points 15 multiple choice; 8 true or false; 8 matching questions 15 multiple.
DO NOW: To be completed in your journal in the next 10 minutes 1. Write down the name of your favorite TV show. For example: “The Simpsons” 2. Next, summarize.
“In the Field” The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien.
Literature Terms and Concepts Plot structure describes the way in which a story is constructed; it shows the sequence of actions and events. A way to visualize.
Sweetheart of the Song Tra Bong Tim O’Brien. In this story, O’Brien paints a highly stylized version of Vietnam as a world that profoundly affects the.
 Jimmy Cross visits Tim O’Brien at home  The two start by drinking coffee, smoking cigarettes, and looking at photographs from the war (they eventually.
Tim O’Brien was born in 1946 in a small town in Minnesota. At the age of 22, after graduating from college, he was drafted into the army. He went through.
The Things They Carried by Tim O'Brien Lyona Elie Rose Gonzalez Stephanie Ng.
Sparknotes21. SparkNotes Editors. (2002). SparkNote on The Things They Carried. Retrieved June 28, 2013, from
The Things They Carried, continued Tim O’Brien. Do Now How would you define an honors student?
Survivors.
The Things They Carried
The things they carried
The Things They Carried
Welcome Back! Interview notes DUE ON CANVAS BY JAN. 6TH AT 11:59 PM!
The Things They Carried
TTTC Quiz Notes.
The Things They CARRIED.
“The Things They Carried”
The Things They Carried ~ Tim O’Brien
“The Things They Carried”
Literary Elements Plot Point of View Mood
The Things They Carried ~ Tim O’Brien
LOVE.
The Things They CARRIED.
Text of Choice Protagonist From to
The Things They Carried
The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien
The Things They Carried
Chapter 15: “SPEAKING OF COURAGE”
The Things They Carried
Happy Friday! Have out at least 2 sheets of notebook paper for note taking today! We ABSOLUTELY CANNOT talk about the test yesterday!
by Katherine Mansfield
Presentation transcript:

Donovan Chew Pd

 Setting (Time): Late 1960’s and Late 1980’s  Setting (Place): Primarily Vietnam  Conflicts: The Men of the Alpha Company, Especially Tim O’Brien, Grapple With the Effects—Both Immediate and Long-Term—of the Vietnam War.

 Theme : The Fear Of Shame As Motivation  Analysis : Fear Of Shame Not Only Motivates Reluctant Men To Go To Vietnam But Also Affect’s Soldiers’ Relationships With Each Other Once There. Concern About Social Acceptance, Which Might Seem In The Abstract An Unimportant Preoccupation Given The Immediacy Of Death And Necessity Of Group Unity During War.

 Jimmy Cross: His Character Represents The Profound Effects That Responsibility Has On Those Who Are Too Immature To Handle It. Jimmy Cross Was Viewed As A Christ Figure. In Times Of Inexplicable Atrocity, Certain Individuals Assume The Position Of A Group Or Their Own Savior.  Mitchell Sanders: Mitchell Is A Likeable Soldier And Devoted Friend And Also Has A Sense Of Irony. Sanders Often Applies This Pragmatism To His Story Telling. He Believes That A Good War Story Often Lacks A Moral And That Sometimes A Story Without Commentary Speaks For Itself

 Henry Dobbins - The platoon’s machine gunner and resident gentle giant. Dobbins’s profound decency, despite his simplicity, contrasts with his bearish frame. He is a perfect example of the incongruities in Vietnam.  Curt Lemon - A childish and careless member of the Alpha Company who is killed when he steps on a rigged mortar round. Though O’Brien does not particularly like Lemon, Lemon’s death is something O’Brien continually contemplates with sadness and regret. The preventability of his death and the irrational fears of his life—as when a dentist visits the company—point to the immaturity of many young American soldiers in Vietnam.

 The Dead Young Vietnamese Soldier: Although O’Brien is unclear about whether or not he actually threw a grenade and killed a man outside My Khe, his memory of the man’s corpse is strong and recurring, symbolizing humanity’s guilt over war’s horrible acts. In “The Man I Killed,” O’Brien distances himself from the memory by speaking in the third person and constructing fantasies as to what the man must have been like before he was killed.  Ambiguous Morality: O’Brien’s stories show that the jungle blurs boundaries between right and wrong. The brutal killing of innocents on both sides cannot be explained, and in some moments of disbelief, the men deal with the pain of their feelings by pointing out the irony. Exposed to these horrors, the men’s notions of right and wrong shift and bend.

 The protagonist, Tim O’Brien, begins by describing an event that occurred in the middle of his Vietnam experience. “The Things They Carried” catalogs the variety of things his fellow soldiers in the Alpha Company brought on their missions. Several of these things are intangible, including guilt and fear, while others are specific physical objects, including matches, morphine, M-16 rifles, and M&M’s candy. The work recounts his personal experience in the Vietnam War and allows him to comment on the war. He enters the war a scared young man afraid of the shame that dodging the war would bring him and leaves the war a guilt-ridden middle-aged man who tells stories about Vietnam in order to cope with his painful memories.

 Quote: “He was a slim, dead, almost dainty young man of about twenty. He lay with one leg bent beneath him, his jaw in his throat, his face neither expressive nor inexpressive. One eye was shut. The other was a star- shaped hole.”  Analysis: This quotation, from “The Man I Killed,” describes the corpse of a young Vietnamese soldier whom O’Brien killed with a grenade. In this story, the narration is from a third-person perspective, and is largely a series of unconnected observations and fantasies about the young, dead soldier. This particular passage is an example of the concrete description O’Brien uses to come to terms with his killing of the boy.

 Quote: “They carried the soldier’s greatest fear, which was the fear of blushing. Men killed, and died, because they were embarrassed not to. It was what had brought them to the war in the first place, nothing positive, no dreams of glory or honor, just to avoid the blush of dishonor. They died so as not to die of embarrassment.”  Analysis: This quotation from the first story, “The Things They Carried,” is part of a longer passage about the emotional baggage of men at risk of dying. O’Brien contends that barely restrained cowardice is a common secret among soldiers. He debunks the notion that men go to war to be heroes. Instead, he says, they go because they are forced to and because refusal equals cowardice. This detached generalization foreshadows several later references to courage and juxtapositions of courage and cowardice.