Monday, October 27, 2014

Literary Devices

Video Examples:


Some Examples From Disney (taken from Buzzfeed)

1. Theme

Theme
Definition: A common thread or repeated idea that is incorporated throughout a literary work.
Example: “True love conquers all” is the main theme of Sleeping Beauty.

2. Symbolism

Symbolism
Disney / Via scienceblogs.com
Definition: An object, character, figure, or color that is used to represent an abstract idea or concept.
Example: Dumbo’s “magic” feather represents courage and self-confidence. Once he truly believes in himself, he no longer needs it as a psychological crutch.

3. Dramatic Irony

Dramatic Irony
Disney / Via fanpop.com
Definition: Irony that occurs when the meaning of the situation is understood by the audience but not by the characters in the literary work.
Example: Throughout most of The Lion King, Simba mopes around feeling guilty for his father’s death, unaware (as the audience is) that Scar actually killed Mufasa.

4. Archetype

Archetype
Disney / Via thehollywoodnews.com
Definition: A constantly recurring symbol or motif in literature, painting, or mythology.
Example: Alice must pass a series of tests as she makes her way through Wonderland. This kind of journey is a common archetype in Western literature and is best epitomized by Homer’s The Odyssey.

5. Foil

Foil
Definition: A character who illuminates the qualities of another character by means of contrast.
Example: Gaston’s combination of good looks and terrible personality emphasizes Beast’s tragic situation. The former is a monster trapped inside a man; the latter a man trapped inside a monster.

6. Allusion

Allusion
Disney / Via bslcrane.blogspot.com
Definition: A brief reference in a literary work to a person, place, thing, or passage in another literary work, usually for the purpose of associating the tone or theme of the one work with the other.
Example: In The Hunchback of Notre Dame, the gargoyle Laverne tells a flock of pigeons to “Fly my pretties! Fly, Fly!” à la the Wicked Witch of the West in The Wizard of Oz.

7. Foreshadowing

Foreshadowing
Definition: A warning or indication of a future event.
Example: Before she’s fatally shot by a hunter (and millions of childhoods are scarred), Bambi’s mother gives Bambi a stern lecture on the dangers of man.

8. Mood

Mood
Disney / Via filmfanatic.org
Definition: The atmosphere that pervades a literary work with the intention of evoking a certain emotion or feeling from the audience.
Example: Fantasia frequently uses music and setting to drastically shift the mood from light and playful to dark and foreboding.

9. Breaking the Fourth Wall

Breaking the Fourth Wall

Definition: Speaking directly to or acknowledging the audience. The “fourth wall” refers to the imaginary “wall” at the front of the stage in a traditional three-walled box set in a proscenium theater.
Example: Timon acknowledges the audience when he cuts off Pumbaa midsong: “Pumbaa, not in front of the kids!”

10. Exposition

Exposition
Disney / Via thecomixverse.com
Definition: The portion of a story that introduces important background information to the audience — for example, information about the setting, events occurring before the main plot, characters’ backstories, etc.
Example: At the beginning of Robin Hood, the rooster Alan-a-Dale describes how Robin Hood has been robbing from the rich to give to Nottingham’s poor.

11. Conflict

Conflict
Definition: An inherent incompatibility between the objectives of two or more characters or forces.
Example: When Shere Khan the man-eating tiger returns to the jungle, Mowgli must flee to the safety of human civilization.

12. Climax

Climax
Definition: The turning point in the action (also known as the “crisis”) and/or the highest point of interest or excitement.
Example: Pinocchio is transformed into a donkey and sold into labor before he saves Geppetto and proves himself worthy of being a real boy.

13. Anagnorisis

Anagnorisis
Disney / Via gengame.net
Definition: The recognition or discovery by the protagonist of the identity of some character or the nature of his own predicament, which leads to the resolution of the plot.
Example: Arthur, thinking he’s just a lowly squire, has no idea he’s the rightful heir to the throne until he pulls the sword from the stone.

14. Poetic Justice

Poetic Justice
Definition: A device in which virtue is ultimately rewarded or vice punished, often by an ironic twist of fate intimately related to the character’s own conduct.
Example: Jafar is so power hungry he fails to realize that becoming a genie will cost him his freedom.

15. Deus Ex Machina

Deus Ex Machina
Disney / Via disney.wikia.com
Definition: An unexpected power or event saving a hopeless situation, especially as a plot device in a play or novel, from the Latin “a god from a machine.”
Example: In Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the Evil Queen is about to kill the dwarfs when a bolt of lightning comes out of nowhere, knocking her off the mountain to her death.

16. Denouement

Denouement
Definition: The final part of a play, movie, or narrative in which the strands of the plot are drawn together and matters are resolved.
Example: At the end of The Little Mermaid, Ursula is killed, King Triton turns Ariel into a human, and Ariel marries Prince Eric. Then Sebastian sings over the closing credits. WIN.

Saturday, October 25, 2014

Historical Fiction Unit Info



Meeting Dates:


  • Core 3: 10/29, 11/6, 11/17
  • Core 4: 10/30, 11/5, 11/20
  • Core 5: 10/30, 11/5, 11/19
  • Core 6: 10/30, 11/5, 11/18


Meeting Info:


At each meeting, you will put your individual information together into a shared Google Doc.  Whoever is Discussion Director will be in charge of creating the final blog post at the end of the meeting.

You can negotiate rotating roles or stick with the same role for the entire book. The group must come to a unanimous decision about the roles and the schedule. Note: Each group must have a discussion director and a device director and no two students may do the same role for the same group at the same meeting.  The other jobs may be done on a rotating basis for the rest of the meetings.

****If you are in a group with students in various cores: you will put your info into the shared doc on Drive and read/respond to what others have posted.  After, please make a short appointment during study hall to meet with all of your group members in person to discuss and make the final blog post.

ROLES


1. Discussion Director*: Your role is to come up with 4 thoughtful discussion questions for each group meeting. You will lead the discussion taking notes on your group’s responses. Questions must be thought provoking and debatable. You will post your questions with the discussion notes after every meeting on the blog page.  Connect historical context to current events.

2. Director of Rhetoric: You are the literary critic; your role is to note at least 5 important literary devices for each group meeting. You should look for things like irony, imagery, metaphor, symbolism, inciting moment, foil characters, and other significant devices. For each device include a cited quote or paraphrase. Also be sure to label the device. During the meeting, you will go over these devices
and examples for your group, allowing for discussion and questioning from other members. You will post your work at the end of each meeting on the blog page.

3. Art Director: As the artists in residence, your role is to create an artistic rendering of significance for each group meeting. You may draw from characters, events, mood, or other inspiration, but it must be significant and justifiable. You may be abstract or concrete, but either way your job is to explain your art to your group at each meeting. Art may be in the form of drawing, painting, photograph, collage, sculpture, crafting, or other mediums. You will add an image of the art to the shared doc on Drive after every meeting with a helpful caption explaining its significance.

4. Vocabulary Director: Your role is to pick out at least 5 difficult words from each section to bring to the meetings. You must write the word, the definition, and a properly cited quote that includes that word. During the meeting you will explain the meanings to your classmates, and develop quality sentences that use the new words. Be sure that the definition you select makes sense in context!  At each meeting, you will update the vocab list in a shared doc on Google Drive.

5. Context Director*: Your role is to investigate the historical context surrounding the novel. For each meeting, bring information on a major event, historical figure or other relevant historical information that ties in closely with the novel. You must write one page of handwritten or typed notes (bullet points are okay) with a proper citation. Do not use Wikipedia as a final source.