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Agenda for the evening New student introductions Review writing assignment procedure Reminder to get a library card Finish up Award Book discussion/state.

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Presentation on theme: "Agenda for the evening New student introductions Review writing assignment procedure Reminder to get a library card Finish up Award Book discussion/state."— Presentation transcript:

1 Agenda for the evening New student introductions Review writing assignment procedure Reminder to get a library card Finish up Award Book discussion/state awards- Yes, all states have them Lecture Read & share folktales Go over next week’s assignments 1

2 Genres of Literature & Traditional Fantasy 2

3 PROSEPOETRY NONFICTIONFICTION BIOGRAPHYINFORMATIONALFANTASYREALISM TRADITIONAL FANTASYMODERN FANTASYHISTORICAL CONTEMPORARY FICTION SCIENCE FICTION Genres of Children’s Literature 3

4 All literature is either prose or poetry. All forms of literature branch off of prose or poetry. 4

5 Poetry: Can either rhyme or not Can be shorter or longer than prose Can be in the form of haiku, sonnet, couplet, limerick, narrative, cinquain or free verse. Is never written in paragraphs. 5

6 Cinquain Poetry; For example: 6

7 Structure of Cinquain Poetry: Line 1: one word (subject or noun) Line 2: two words (adjective) to describe line 1 Line 3: three words (action verbs) relating to line 1 Line 4: four words (feelings or complete sentence) relating to line 1 Line 5: 1 word (synonym of line 1 or sums up line 1 7

8 Difference Between Fiction & Nonfiction is Documentation Fiction: from author’s imagination and cannot be verified in other sources. The structure comes from author’s imagination. Nonfiction: requires documentation. Nonfiction is classified as biography and informational. Biographies and autobiographies tell all or a part of the tale of an actual person’s life. 8

9 Nonfiction Is classified into 1 of 10 categories called the Dewey Decimal System. Was invented by Melvil Dewey All numbers range from 000-999.99 All numbers except for the 800’s (literature) are nonfiction. 9

10 Melvil Dewey Born on Dec. 10, 1851 Went to Amherst, worked in library Developed system of grouping books by subject Published Classification and Subject Index Also founded the ALA Life begins to take nasty turns…. 10

11 11 000-099000-099 News, Internet, Museums & Magazines 100-199100-199 Psychology, Witch Trials & Philosophy 200-299 Religion & Mythology 300-399 Education, Fairy Tales, Folk Tales & Social Sciences 400-499 Language 500-599 Sciences & Mathematics 600-699 Technology, Health & Cooking 700-799 Arts, Sports & Recreation 800-899 Literature 900-999 Geography, History & Travel 9292 BiographyT DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM

12 Realistic & Fantasy Fiction Both are invented stories with invented characters which may or may not take place in a real setting. The difference between realistic and fantasy fiction lies in the laws of the universe. If the setting is based in reality and the characters are grounded in reality, then it’s realistic fiction. If the story has elements not in our physical world, then it’s fantasy. 12

13 Contemporary & Historical Fiction Contemporary Fiction: the story takes place in today’s world Historical Fiction: the story takes place in the past. Both tell interesting stories about people in our world. 13

14 Traditional Fantasy It is called Traditional Fantasy because the stories are part of the human tradition of storytelling. The authors are unknown. They are now written down in print as collections (like Grimm), but they were collectors, not authors, of these stories. If it has an indentifiable author, it is not traditional fantasy. 14

15 Brothers Grimm Jacob & Wilhelm were born in 1785 & 1786 into a family of 8 boys & 1 girl. They started collecting stories from their fellow villagers. In 1812, they published their 1 st volume of 86 stories. Worked as librarians, remained close throughout their lives. 15

16 Modern Fantasy vs. Traditional Fantasy If a fantasy story has an identifiable author, then it is a modern fantasy. Thus, Hans Christian Anderson is a modern fantasy author, because the story originated from him and it has his flavor in its telling. 16

17 Modern Fantasy and Science Fiction Science Fiction (under the subset of Modern Fantasy) deals with scientific possibilities. Both Science Fiction and Modern Fantasy contain elements not found in the known universe. In Modern Fantasy, other worldly abilities just ARE or come about by magic, in Science Fiction science is used to make it possible. 17

18 Traditional Fantasy Originated orally –told from one person to another. Has no definite author. Every country and culture has books that have been compiled from the oral tradition. First collector of tales was Charles Perrault. 18

19 Charles Perrault Born in Paris to wealthy bourgeois parents. Attended best schools, studied Law, married, had 4 children Also was an architect who designed the east wing of the Louvre At 67, lost his job and began publishing Mother Goose Tales in 1697 Known as the Father of Fairy Tales 19

20 Peculiarities of Traditional Fantasy Traditional Fantasy is held to a different literary standard. The characters are not well developed. All deal with the basic emotions of life. Plots are very simplistic. Storylines all have the same themes. 20

21 Universal Nature of Traditional Fantasy All have morals that have become part of our daily speech. We are surrounded by allusions to fairy tales. They have included all characters, plots and themes ever written. 21

22 Value of Fantasy Stories The suspension of belief – the “let’s pretend” aspect Fantasy has the ability to work on our emotions with the same vividness as a dream. It gives children an absolute to believe in. It gives children the ability to hope. HOPE is the essential thread in all fantasy literature. 22

23 Types of Traditional Fantasy Literature There are a variety of types of folktales. Cumulative Tales: stories that are added on as the story grows Pourquoi Tales: “why” tales – they answer questions and give explanations for the way things are, particularly in nature Beast Tales: animals are the main characters, typically representing humans 23

24 Noodlehead or Numbskull Tales: humorous tales of the “not too bright”. Sometimes the main character makes a problem with their ridiculous mistakes, but they often come out on top. Trickster Tales: a variety of the beast tale, but features a character that outsmarts others in the story. Realistic Tales: have a basis in actual fact. Fairy Tales: also known as Wonder Tales. Most magical of all the folktales, they include talking animals, fairy godmothers - all magical objects. 24

25 Tall Tales: uses much exaggeration. Many grew as a push to open North American, but there are tall tales from all over the world. Fables: are meant to teach a lesson and conclude with a moral Myths: grew out of people’s need to understand and explain the world Epics, Ballads and Legends: tales that focus on a hero. They are often lengthy. Religious Stories: came out of people’s quest to share beliefs and encompass all religions. 25

26 For next week: Read chapter 9 of your text book Watch correlating movie from your Hollywood paper/take notes on the difference between reading & watching Write draft # 1 of Writing Assignment #3. 26


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