Getting Started on the Close Reading. Surface Meaning / Deeper Meaning To start, try to think how the text benefits from a re-reading. On first reading.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
IT’S STORY TIME.
Advertisements

An Introduction to Close Reading
Plot, Character, Setting, Point of View& Theme
Story Elements Flipbook Project
Elements of a Narrative Essay
By: Jennifer, Malik, Tony. Literary Terms Authors purpose Diction Imagery Characterization Setting Symbolism.
Plot Language Point of viewof Setting Theme Character.
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.
ELEMENTS OF A SHORT STORY
Short Story Unit Notes.
ELEMENTS OF THE SHORT STORY The short story emerges from the writer’s careful manipulation of various formal elements, which will usually include: Plot.
English 9.  The act of analysis is literally the act of separating a whole into parts in order to understand that whole.  For your assignment you are.
Patterns for Developing Ideas in Writing
THINGS TO CONSIDER WHEN READING NON-FICTION- SPEECHES, ESSAYS, & ARTICLES.
Lesson 8: Writing about Literature
Analyzing literature What does it mean?.
Inside Out and Back Again
Elements of a Short Story
IT’S STORY TIME IT’S STORY TIME Elements of Fiction Elements of Fiction.
Writing Analytically.
Review: Story Elements and other notes
CAPT Response to Literature Strategies How to Succeed at Answering the Four Questions (in about 40 minutes)
Annotation Finding literary devices within a literary work.
THE MODES OF WRITING: HOW TO WRITE FOR DIFFERENT PURPOSES Created for Edmond Public Schools©
Short Story Literary Elements. What is a short story? A short story is a brief work of fiction.
IT’S STORY TIME IT’S STORY TIME Author’s Purpose An author’s reason for creating a particular work is called the author’s purpose. Sometimes the author.
Analyzing Literature: You will be analyzing literature until you graduate college! Knowing how to approach an analysis is necessary and helpful!
Nonfiction.
Elements of Short Stories
1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.
Elements of Fiction Analyzing the Short Story. 10/24/ The Elements of a Short Story Plot Character Setting Point of View Theme Conflict Style.
Short Stories. Titles The titles of short stories are always surrounded by quotation marks and are usually preceded by a comma. For instance, we might.
The time and location in which a story takes place is called the setting. For some stories the setting is very important, while for others it is not.
+. + Close Reading & Annotation Or: Here’s what you’re going to do with the text so you can answer the questions later.
Patterns of Development The arrangement of an essay, speech, or story according to its purpose. These notes cover the wide range of logical ways to organize.
Literary Terms.
Critical Essay.  To understand how to structure a critical essay.
Identifying Theme You thought you knew, but you have no idea…
Short Stories.
Unit 1 Notes Part 1. What is theme?  Theme- an insight into human nature that emerges over the course of a work. A theme may be directly stated or implied.
What is poetry? Short literary art in which language is used to evoke emotion or tell a story –SHORT Rich with language and emotion Each word carries more.
The Art of Annotating The Pathway to Analytical Reading.
What is rhetoric? What you need to know for AP Language.
Reading Log #1 - Predictions
PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITIES: SHARE, COMPROMISE, COOPERATE.
DICTION. WORD CHOICE DENOTATION DICTIONARY DEFINITION OF A WORD.
PLOT The sequence of events in a story. Plot is also a pattern of actions, events and situations Plot includes exposition exciting force/inciting incident.
Opinion Essay Response to Literature Mrs. Walsh Source: Nancy Fetzer.
A Change of Heart About Animals
6 TH GRADE ACADEMIC VOCABULARY 2 ND GRADING PERIOD.
ELEMENTS OF A SHORT STORY SHORT STORY SHORT ENOUGH TO READ IN ONE SITTING oral tradition - story handed down generation to generation parables - stories.
IT’S STORY TIME.
Short Stories.
IMPORTANT ENGLISH TERMS English II. Terms and definitions Characterization Definition: The way a writer creates and develops characters’ personalities.
Literary Terms. Plot: The sequence of events in a story Exposition Inciting incident Rising action Climax Falling action Resolution.
Short Story Notes.
Unit 1 Vocabulary.
Beyond the Yellow Highlighter
Foundational Literary Analysis Terms
Nonfiction is prose that
Literary Elements Plot Point of View Mood
Literary Elements Plot Point of View Mood
Unit 1: Short Story Fiction.
Elements of a Short Story
Unit 1: Short Story Fiction.
World Literature: Short Stories
Unit 1: Short Story Fiction.
Nonfiction is prose that
Journal: Think about the emotions being portrayed in and about the story behind the photograph above. What details do you notice that help you develop.
Literature 9th Grade Conflict: a struggle between two opposing forces
Presentation transcript:

Getting Started on the Close Reading

Surface Meaning / Deeper Meaning To start, try to think how the text benefits from a re-reading. On first reading the text might be.... But on a close reading something else. Or you might be respond one way, but see that the text wants to also do something else. This helps give a thesis. Re-read as if with a “magnifying glass.”

Choose a Text Sonny’s Blues Love Medicine The Open Boat Others?

Choose a Text...

Theme How to characterize it specifically (but not too much)? Where is something said that is ambiguous, overwrought, that lends itself to scrutiny? Write that theme, idea... (find evidence)

Part / Whole How do the “parts” get us there..,.

Character / Conflict Describe the main character. How would you describe and/or categorize the other characters? How does the character interact with other characters. Is another character an alter ego or the “flip side” of a character’s personality? Does the character grow or stay the same (“round” or “flat”)? Describe the conflict or problems these characters face. What are the character’s motivations, inner conflicts, doubts? What are the characters virtues or vices?

Plot Think of the story as a sequence of stages or steps. Mark where each new stage begins, and consider how the sequence could be understood Analyze aspects that might not appear to have anything to do with the plot (such as dreams), and look for ways to arrange these images.

Setting What’s the setting of your story? Does it change, stay the same? How does the setting signal what is happening? How does it change? Look for cause-and-effect connections between descriptions of the setting and what the characters are feeling or thinking (objective correlative?) Assume that the setting symbolized something outside of their control (nature), then consider what the setting tells you about the pressures and rules under which the characters function.

Point of View Is the narrator a character in the story or all knowing? What does the narrator distort. What does he/she not see that we do? What tone or attitude does the author take at various points in the story? What special agenda led the narrator to a particular way of describing characters or scenes?

Annotations Explore your pre-critical response: what you have already written in your posts, in the margins of your books.

Drafting the Thesis Statement Write down some ideas, and then try to come to a tentative thesis. Or try this Although ________X (opposing view, first appearance), nevertheless ________Y (your own view, a more careful, reasoned view), because _________ Z (evidence).

Testing Your Choice Writers: Take turns reading your tentative thesis statement out loud. Then take notes as your partner tells you what your thesis statement leads them to expect from your essay. Listeners: As the writer speaks, note what you think are the key terms in the thesis statement. Tell what you expect. Also indicate if you think the writer will have difficulty supporting any of these ideas.

Goals for Drafting Analysis: Where to do micro-analysis? Which parts to analyze? Beginnings and endings often give you the “whole.” Organize: A Chronological approach: what happens as the story unfolds (reader in the act of reading). One more topical: these are the patterns. Audience: they have read the book but not as insightfully as you have. Your purpose: to enhance their reading and understanding. Argument: say something that someone else might not believe. What to title?

Evidene, Evidence, Evidence Support your points. Break down and unpack words, meanings. OED Denotation / Connotation