Title: AP Lang
1AP Lang
2Today
- Speeches First
- Book groups
- Cornell Notes How-to
- Suggested Weekend work- start thinking about
independent reading - At least 200 pages
- Nonfiction highly suggested
- Thank You for Arguing is my recommendation
3What Cornell Notes looks like
- The cool kids call them C-notes
4Why bother with Cornell notes?
- In 1885, Hermann Ebbinghaus did extensive
research around the idea of forgetting. In his
book, Memory A Contribution to Experimental
Psychology, he mapped out the rate at which the
average human forgets information over time.
5- Ebbinghaus went on to examine how frequently a
student would need to revisit information in
order to regain near perfect recall. His
research evinces the brains ability to retain
information, when we revisit the information
during key times.
6The University of Waterloo put both of them
together and came up with this
7- The idea is that the Cornell notes setup builds
in ways to review your notes at those critical
points by hiding or revealing different parts of
the material so you can quiz yourself.
8Welcome to a Wonderful Wednesday or Shana Tova
- Check your Summer Reading Discussion Notes- be
ready to give me a commitment by the end of
class - Homework for Monday Chapter 1 in LangComp with
Cornell Notes
9Warmup 1
- Make a T-chart
- Left column
- Says
- Right Column
- does
10Questions
- 1. What details can you group together to draw a
bigger inference? Label them with an adjective - 2. What emotional tones does the painting convey?
- 3. What seems to be a theme of the picture?
11- New T-chart
- Says/Does http//www.youtube.com/watch?v_lfxYht
f8o4
12Announcements, announcements, anou-oun-cements!
- Cornell Notes for pages 1-27 due Monday
- QuestBridge info
- Double-check independent reading. Have your book
by next Thursday - Names Quiz takers?
13Warmup 2
- Consider An aged man is but a paltry thing
- A tattered coat upon a stick W.B. Yeats,
Sailing to Byzantium - DiscussWhat picture is created by the use of the
word tattered? - By understanding the connotations of the word
tattered, what do we understand about the
personas attitude toward an aged man? - ApplyList three adjectives that can be used to
describe a pair of shoes. Each adjective should
connote a different feeling about the shoes. -
14- Take out that says/does chart from Wednesday
- You Are Not Special speech
15Minutia
- Missing Letters- SPENCER
- No late penalty
- Names Quizzes continue
- Have out your homework Cornell Notes and your
Says/Does chart from the McCullough speech - Homework- Make notecards for the terms in Ch 1
16Warmup 3
- Consider The man sighed hugely.
E. Annie Proulx, The Shipping
News - Discuss What does it mean to sigh hugely?
- How would the meaning of the sentence change if
we rewrote it as The man sighed loudly. - Apply Fill in the blank below with an adverb
- The man coughed ___________________.
- Your adverb should make the cough express and
attitude. For example, the cough could express
contempt, desperation, or propriety. Do not state
the attitude. Instead, let the adverb imply it.
17Says/Does for McCollough
- You Are Not Special speech
- 1-10 for Logos, Ethos, Pathos
- Watch for how he establishes L/E/P
- Note the structure of the speech
- In your opinion, what were the 3 most important
things the speech Does?
18Formula Sentence
- title author active verb term example 1
example 2 purpose. - Example In Leaving Home by Norman Rockwell,
the artist employs contrasting clothing of
working class denim versus a summer suit between
father and son, respectively, to demonstrate the
stark differences between their occupations.
19Warmup 4
- What might the metaphor- throw them a lifeline
look like in real life? - Be creative if you need to, but if you can draw
from your own life experiences, itll help you
more in a bit
20- Emails
- Finishing up Youre Not Special
- Summer Reading
- 3- good start
- 2- some promising work
- 1- You have lots of room to improve
21Minutia
- Have your IRB in class tomorrow
- Tonight- Read 36-48. Think of Angelous My First
Lifeline as you read their analysis of Didion
and compare their suggestions of dialectical
journals to the annotating I presented yesterday.
- As always- add the bold words to your notecards
- Not Ethos from yesterday, Pathos as
propagandistic and polemical- Somebody should
have called me on that one!
22Warmup 5
- It is a far, far better thing that I do, than I
have ever done it is a far, far better rest that
I go to, than I have ever known - Charles Dickens A Tale of Two Cities
- Discuss Put the sentence into your own words.
How does the sentences complexity add to its
impact? - Where are the most important words at the
beginning or at the end? What effect does this
have on the reader? - What is the effect of the rhyme and repetition in
this sentence? - What function does the colon serve in this
sentence? - Apply- Using Dickens sentence as a model, write
a sentence using repetition for emphasis and a
progression of ideas. Insert a semicolon as well
if you dare.
23Learning how to read, all over again. What does
Angelou DO with the first sentence?
- For nearly a year, I sopped around the house, the
Store, the school and the church, like an old
biscuit, dirty and inedible. Then I met, or
rather got to know, the lady who threw me my
first life line.
24(No Transcript)
25Freaky Friday Warmup 6
- He was a year older than I, skinny, brown as a
chocolate bar, his hair orange, his hazel eyes
full of mischief and laughter. - Esmerelda Santaigo, When I was Puerto Rican
- Look carefully at the way this sentence is
written. All of the words that follow the word I
are used to describe the he of the sentence.
They are adjectives and adjective phrases. This
is not the way words are usually ordered in
English. (Usually, adjectives are right before
the nouns they modify, or at least next to them.)
What effect does this word order have on the
meaning of the sentence? - Placing all of the adjective phrases one after
the other is called layering. What effect does
this layering have on the impact of the sentence?
26Playing with Syntax
- He was a year older than I, skinny, brown as a
chocolate bar, his hair orange, his hazel eyes
full of mischief and laughter. - He (She) was ___comparative of an adjective___
than I, ___adjective____, ____simile that
describes the subject_____, his/her hair
___adjective____, his/her eyes ____adjective
phrase_____.
27Words to know
- Diction
- Syntax
- Tone
- style
- Schemes and Tropes (you wont really need these
unless you major in English or go to grad school)
28- Metaphor and simile- figurative language
- Personification
- Hyperbole
- Parallelism
- Juxtaposition
- Antitheses
29- To the Mattresses!
- Err, laptops
30- Homework- 4 diction annotations on Lifeline
- Bring paper copies of your Lifeline Essays
tomorrow to class. Youll be annotating your own.
31Warmup 7
- What level is the diction- formal or informal and
is it general or concrete? - What are the effects of diction on meaning and
tone? - Apply- Write 1 diction annotation for this
excerpt - The instructor said,
- Go home and write
- A page tonight.
- And let that page come out of you
- Then, it will be true. I wonder if its that
simple? - I am twenty-two, colored, born in Winston-Salem.
- I went to school there, Then Durham, then here
- To this college o nthe hill above Harlem.
- I am the only colored student in my class.
- The steps from the hill lead down into Harlem,
- Through a park, then I cross St. Nicholas,
- Eighth Avenue, Seventh and I come to the Y,
- The Harlem Branch Y, where I take the elevator
- Up to my room, sit down, and write this page.
- Langston Hughes, Theme for English B
32- Homework- Study for tomorrows Quiz.
- Be ready for anything- especially for analyzing a
piece of writing like they do with the Didion
essay in Ch 2
33Warmup 7
- But that is Coopers way frequently he will
explain and justify little things that do not
need it and then make yup for this by as
frequently failing to explain important ones that
do need it. For instance he allowed that astute
and cautious person, Deerslayer-Hawkeye, to throw
his rifle heedlessly down and leave it lying on
the front where some hostile Indians would
presently be sure to find it a rifle prized by
that person above all things else in the earth
and the reader hers not work of explanation of
that strange act. There was a reason, but it
wouldnt bear exposure. Cooper meant to get a
fine dramatic effect out of the finding of the
rifle by the Indians, and he accomplished this at
the happy time but all the same, Hawkeye could
have hidden the rifle in a quarter of a minute
where the Indians could not have found it. Cooper
couldnt think of any way to explain why Hawkeye
didnt do that, so he just shirked the difficulty
and did not explain at all. Mark Twain,
Coopers Prose Style, Letters from the Earth - DiscussWhat is Twains tone in this passage?
What is central to the tone of this passage the
attitude toward the speaker, the subject, or the
reader? - How does Twain create the tone?
-
- Apply
- Write a paragraph about a movie you have recently
seen. Create a critical, disparaging tone through
your choice of details. Use Twains paragraph as
a model.
34Monstrous Monday
- Homework- Annotate and polish your own lifeline.
Bring 6 annotations and polished copy to class
tomorrow. Submit the writeup to Turnitin.com as
well. - Warmup 8
- Summarize the Custom House so far. Describe its
diction and tones if you dare.
35Pre-Thinking Scarlet Letter
- Have you ever kept a secret for someone to keep
them from getting in trouble? - Have you ever been judged for doing something?
- Have you ever felt guilty?
- Have you ever felt guilty for keeping a secret to
protect yourself? - Have you ever experienced prejudice as a woman?
- Have you ever been publicly humiliated?
- Have you ever been publicly blamed for something
when you arent the only person who did it? - Have you ever sought revenge on someone?
- Would you ever allow someone to take the blame
for you if you knew they would be publicly
humiliated?
36Annotation Practice with the Masters
- MA- Master Annotaters Are
- Katie W
- Saira
- Megha
- J.R.
- Anna
37- If you were going to have a letter labeling you
for something youre embarrassed about, what
would the letter be and what would it stand for?
38Warmup 9
- Brother, continue to listen.
- You say that you are sent to instruct us how to
worship the Great Spirit agreeably to his mind
and, if we do not take hold of how the religion
which you white people teach, we shall be unhappy
hereafter. You say that you are right and we are
lost. How do we know this to be true? - Chief red Jacket, Chief Red Jacket Rejects a
Change of Religion - Discuss The words you say are repeated several
times in the sentence. What is the repetitions
function? - The question at the end of the passage is a
rhetorical question. What attitude toward the
audience is expressed by the use of a rhetorical
question? - Apply Write a three-sentence paragraph modeled
after Chief Red Jackets passage. The first two
sentences should contain repetition the third
sentence should be a rhetorical question. Your
topic is school uniforms.
39- Homework- Ch 2 39-54
- SL 17-31 with notes
- Bring Textbooks Tomorrow! Remember, this is the
first day since Ive given them to you that Ive
asked you to lug them around. I need you to be
able to deliver, or Ill have to say carry them
all the time
40(No Transcript)
41Syntax sentence structure
- As with diction, for syntax, you look for
patterns and for breaks in patterns. When you
feel youre getting the hang of that, start
branching out into some of the specialized
terminology.
42The Salem Custom House
The Custom House
The Custom House at Salem Maritime NHS is the last of 13 Custom Houses in the city. There has been a Custom House in Salem since 1649, collecting taxes on imported cargos first for the British Government during the Colonial period, then for the American Government after the establishment of theU. S. Customs Service in 1789. This Custom House was built in 1819 and housed offices for the officers of the U.S. Customs Service, as well as an attached warehouse, the Public Stores, used for the storage of bonded and impounded cargo. The Custom House symbolized the Federal Government's presence in Salem, requiring the architects to design an impressive building. High ceilings, a sweeping staircase, and beautifully carved woodwork all contribute to a feeling of strength and stability. The Salem Custom House was used by the U. S. Customs Service into the 1930s, and the furnishings reflect the long use of the building. Images and Information Courtesy of the National Park Service Website NPS.org
43- The Collector's offices were furnished with rich
colors and fine furniture. The furniture in these
offices was purchased by the Customs Service in
1873. - In 1826, a wooden eagle was placed on the roof.
It was carved by Salem craftsman Joseph True, and
its original cost was 50.00. In 2004, the
original eagle was replaced with a fiberglass
replica. After several years of conservation
work, the Joseph True eagle will be going on
display in the Custom House in 2007. - P 5
44- What does the Rhetorical Triangle for The Custom
House look like?
45American Romanticism
- Backlash against 18th century Enlightenment which
focused on science as a way to find truth - Builds on British Romanticism which started at
the turn of the 19th century, many see an
influence of the French Revolution. Seen in the
works of British poets William Wordsworth and
Samuel Coleridge. Builds to Transcendentalism - Characteristics of American Romantic Literature
- Distrust of civilization and cities
- Nostalgia for the past
- Focus on individual freedom
- Appreciation of the beauty of nature
- Interest in the supernatural
46It Might Be American Romantic Literature if
- Hero seems youthful, innocent
- Heroes love nature and hate civilization
- Heroes distrust women who are seen as
civilizing and constraining - Heroes often journey from the city to nature
- Getting away from cities allows the hero to focus
on using their imagination and find truth in
nature that cant exist in a city - Often requires a strong suspension of disbelief
- In European literature, the wilderness is often a
frightening, violent place. In American
Literature, wilderness is idealized as a place of
freedom, connects to growth in American
nationalism
47(No Transcript)
48Woebegone Wednesday
- Homework- Annotate Kennedys speech for the
abundance of rhetorical devicesantithesis in
particular, but also parallelism, allusion,
metaphor, and alliteration (add on anaphora and
zeugma if youre bold) - Warmup 10
- Summarize Section 2 of Custom House. Use last
nights notes for reference
49Compare and contrast to whats in your book
50rhetorical devices to annotate for
- Antithesis- parallel syntax with opposite idea
- It was the best of times, it was the worst of
times - parallelism- repeated syntax
- Roses are red/ violets are blue
- Metaphor- implicit comparison
- Juliet is the sun
- Alliteration-repeating sounds at the start of
several closely placed words. - The harried woman hurriedly packed her horrid
bag.
51Allusions are Key
- a reference to a place, person, or something that
happened. This can be real or imaginary and may
refer to anything, including paintings, opera,
folk lore, mythical figures, or religious
manuscripts. The reference can be direct or may
be inferred - Allusions are rhetorical shortcuts they allow the
writer to give an example or get a point across
without going into a lengthy explanation. - Allusions are risky because theyre contingent on
mutual knowledge between speaker and audience.
52Allusion Examples
- He was a real Romeo with the ladies.
- Chocolate was her Achilles heel
- He was a Good Samaritan yesterday when he helped
the lady start her car. - She turned the other cheek after she was cheated
out of a promotion. - This place is like a Garden of Eden.
- Develop Allusion Antennae and look things up
when you come across them. - Mike titled a recent physics lab email More
Trouble in River City and lost some folks
53- Scarlett's Red Dress Scene
- American Heritage Dictionary says
- scarlet woman
- A prostitute, an immoral woman, as in Malicious
gossip had it that she was a scarlet woman, which
was quite untrue . This expression first appeared
in Revelation 175, describing Saint John's
vision of a woman in scarlet clothes with an
inscription on her forehead, "Mystery, Babylon
the Great, the mother of harlots and abominations
of the earth." Some interpreters believe she
stood for Rome, drunk with the blood of saints,
but by about 1700 the term was being used more
generally for a woman with loose morals.
54If youre feeling bold
- Anaphora- Repeating words at the beginning of
poetic stanzas or sentences. What Anaphora have
we seen lately? - Zeugma-any case of parallelism and ellipsis
working together so that a single word governs
two or more other parts of a sentence - Ellipsis- the act of leaving out one or more
words that are not necessary for a phrase to be
understood. This may be done with punctuation ()
but also with syntax. - Begin when ready for Begin when you are ready
- Histories make men wise poets, witty the
mathematics, subtle natural philosophy, deep
moral, grave logic and rhetoric, able to
contend. (Francis Bacon13). - The more usual way of phrasing this would be
"Histories make men wise, poets make them witty,
the mathematics make them subtle, natural
philosophy makes them deep, moral makes them
grave, and logic and rhetoric make them able to
contend."
55- Kennedy's 1961 Inauguration Speech
56Warmup 10
- No sooner had the reverberation of my blows sunk
into silence then I was answered by a voice from
within the tomb! by a cry, as first muffled and
broken, like the sobbing of a child, and then
quickly swelling into one long, loud, and
continuous scream, utterly anomalous and inhuman
a howl! a wailing shriek, half of horror and
half of triumph, such as might have arisen only
out of hell, conjointly from the throats of the
damned in their agony and of the demons that
exult the damnation. - Edgar Allan Poe, The Black Cat
-
- Discuss
- The dashes in this long sentence set off a series
of appositives. (An appositive is a noun or noun
phrase places beside another noun or noun phrase
and used to identify or explain it.) What noun
phrase is explained by the appositives? - This sentence makes syntactic and semantic sense
if it ends with the first exclamation point. What
do the appositives add to the meaning and
effectiveness of this sentence? -
57- No sooner had the reverberation of my blows sunk
into silence then I was answered by a voice from
within the tomb! by a cry, as first muffled and
broken, like the sobbing of a child, and then
quickly swelling into one long, loud, and
continuous scream, utterly anomalous and inhuman
a howl! a wailing shriek, half of horror and
half of triumph, such as might have arisen only
out of hell, conjointly from the throats of the
damned in their agony and of the demons that
exult the damnation. - Edgar Allan Poe, The Black Cat
- Apply
- Rewrite Poes sentence, changing it into a series
of short sentences. Read your sentences to the
class and note how the use of short sentences
changes the overall meaning of the original.
58- Homework- Last section of Custom House with Notes
59Looking at Kennedys speech
- Why are so many of the words abstract? How do
words like Freedom, poverty, devotion,
loyalty, and sacrifice, impact tone? - Are there clichés in the speech? Are there
fresher metaphors? Where? - Can you find examples of archaic diction? Where?
To what effect are they employed? - More than 20 of the sentences he uses are complex
(check your packet if you need to) how does that
sentence type create an energetic ethos?
60Warmup 11
61 62Chapter 1The Prison-Door
- A throng of bearded men, in sad-colored garments
and gray, steeple-crowned hats, intermixed with
women, some wearing hoods, and others bareheaded,
was assembled in front of a wooden edifice, the
door of which was heavily timbered with oak, and
studded with iron spikes.
63- The founders of a new colony, whatever Utopia of
human virtue and happiness they might originally
project, have invariably recognized it among
their earliest practical necessities to allot a
portion of the virgin soil as a cemetery, and
another portion as the site of a prison. In
accordance with this rule, it may safely be
assumed that the forefathers of Boston had built
the first prison-house, somewhere in the vicinity
of Cornhill, almost as seasonably as they marked
out the first burial-ground, on Isaac Johnson's
lot, and round about his grave, which
subsequently became the nucleus of all the
congregated sepulchres in the old church-yard of
King's Chapel.
64- Certain it is, that, some fifteen or twenty years
after the settlement of the town, the wooden jail
was already marked with weather-stains and other
indications of age, which gave a yet darker
aspect to its beetle-browed and gloomy front. The
rust on the ponderous iron-work of its oaken door
looked more antique than any thing else in the
new world. Like all that pertains to crime, it
seemed never to have known a youthful era. Before
this ugly edifice, and between it and the
wheel-track of the street, was a grass-plot, much
overgrown with burdock, pig-weed, apple-peru, and
such unsightly vegetation, which evidently found
something congenial in the soil that had so early
borne the black flower of civilized society, a
prison.
65- . But, on one side of the portal, and rooted
almost at the threshold, was a wild rose-bush,
covered, in this month of June, with its delicate
gems, which might be imagined to offer their
fragrance and fragile beauty to the prisoner as
he went in, and to the condemned criminal as he
came forth to his doom, in token that the deep
heart of Nature could pity and be kind to him.
66This rose-bush, by a strange chance, has been
kept alive in history but whether it had merely
survived out of the stern old wilderness, so long
after the fall of the gigantic pines and oaks
that originally overshadowed it,--or whether, as
there is fair authority for believing, it had
sprung up under the footsteps of the sainted Ann
Hutchinson, as she entered the prison-door,--we
shall not take upon us to determine. Finding it
so directly on the threshold of our narrative,
which is now about to issue from that
inauspicious portal, we could hardly do otherwise
than pluck one of its flowers and present it to
the reader. It may serve, let us hope, to
symbolize some sweet moral blossom, that may be
found along the track, or relieve the darkening
close of a tale of human frailty and sorrow.
67Warmup NA
- Notecards
- What do you think is behind the persistent
chattiness?
68- Homework- Lets try it flipped
- Watch the A New Adam segmentfrom minutes
1200-3500 - http//www.pbs.org/godinamerica/view/
- Do a rhetoric sheet on the video as you
watchFor the record, wikipedia is never an
adequate source for this class. I hope you knew
that for last nights homework. To do otherwise
damages your ethos. - Lets talk Progress Reports
69- Puritan Groups- What are the top 5 things someone
would need to know to time travel to seventeenth
century New England and not be hanged? - Faith- Cole, Anna, J.R., Celia
- Hope- Spencer, Laura, Saira, Katie W, Lex
- Love- Andrew, Megha, Katie G, Patti
- Temperence- Chad, Ellie, Sam, J.M.
- Mercy- Lilly, Sarah, Ali, Sophia
70- In your Puritan groups- go over the answers for
the Edwards speech. Come to consensus for the
correct ones and be able to defend your choice
with text - Faith- Cole, Anna, J.R., Celia
- Hope- Spencer, Laura, Saira, Katie W, Lex
- Love- Andrew, Megha, Katie G, Patti
- Temperence- Chad, Ellie, Sam, J.M.
- Mercy- Lilly, Sarah, Ali, Sophia
71Edwards MC
- 34- A interpretation
- 35- C interpretation
- 36-B vocabulary in context
- 37- B style analysis
- 38- B vocabulary in context
- 39- A interpretation
- 40- D syntax
- 41- D rhetorical analysis
- 42- E rhetorical analysis
72Feedback Feedback
- The most common responses were
- Because Im with my friends
- Because its the last block of the day
- Announcement time
- Parent Awards
- New Seats!
73Warmup 12
- Now, the use of culture is that it helps us, by
means of its spiritual standard of perfection, to
regard wealth but as machinery, and not only to
say as a matter of words that we regard wealth
but as machinery, but really to perceive and feel
that it is so. If it were not for this purging
effect wrought upon by our minds by culture, the
whole world, the future as well as the present,
would inevitably belong to the philistines. - Matthew Arnold, Sweetness and Light, Culture
and Anarchy -
- Re-write the first sentence in your own words.
How does the sentences complexity add to its
impact? - Discuss Where are the most important words in
the second sentence of this passage at the
beginning or at the end? What effect does this
have on the reader? - Would Hawthorne agree with Arnold?
74Puritan Groups for Rhetoric Sheet
- Faith- Cole, Anna, J.R., Celia
- Hope- Spencer, Laura, Saira, Katie W, Lex
- Love- Andrew, Megha, Katie G, Patti
- Temperence- Chad, Ellie, Sam, J.M.
- Mercy- Lilly, Sarah, Ali, Sophia
75- Dont forget about those new seats!
- Homework- spend 30 minutes with your notecards.
Be sure you have an overall notecard with
patterns of development on one side and the list
of the options on the other
76- Warmup 13
- One of the things you need to recognize in AP
Lang is that everything a writer presents whether
its poetry or prose, fiction or non-fiction
contains an argument. With that mentality, what
argument is Hawthorne making in the Custom House?
77- Look at the new preface to the book
78- Back to SL Ch 1
- As we switch, talk about the Romantic elements
that come into play in the last part of Custom
House with someone next to you
79- Thinking about Ch 1- what can you predict will be
some of the primary motifs in the book?
80Warmup 14
- Consider Most men wear their belts low here,
there being so many outstanding bellies, some big
enough to have their names of their own and be
formally introduced. Those men dont suck them in
or hide them in loose shirts, they let them hang
free, they pat them, they stroke them as they
stand around and talk. - Garrison Keillor, Home, Lake Wobegone Days
-
- Discuss What is the usual meaning of
outstanding? What is its meaning here? what does
this pun reveal about the attitude of the author
toward this subject? - Read the second sentence again. How would the
level of formality change if we changed suck to
pull and let them hang free to accept them?
81- Most men wear their belts low here, there being
so many outstanding bellies, some big enough to
have their names of their own and be formally
introduced. Those men dont suck them in or hide
them in loose shirts, they let them hang free,
they pat them, they stroke them as they stand
around and talk. - Garrison Keillor, Home, Lake Wobegone Days
- Apply
- Write a sentence or two describing tan
unattractive but beloved relative. In your
description, use words that describe the
unattractive features honestly yet reveal that
you care about this person, that you accept and
even admire him/her, complete with defects. Use
Keillors description as a model. Throw in a pun
if you can think of one. Share your description
with the class.
82- Homework- Read and annotate through chapter 6 by
Wednesday - Annotating a book
- Sub Plans
- Picking back up in the middle of Page 48
83- Puritan Punishments
- Laws in colonial Massachusetts covered everything
from swearing to excessive decoration on womens
caps to murder. - Whipping, branding, and other forms of public
humiliation were relatively common practices - in the colonies. Hester Prynnes punishment was
mild by Puritan standards.
84Lifeline Essays
- Graded on writing and meeting the requirements of
the prompt. Grades do not reflect my judgment of
your life. - The best papers interwove connecting or
thematically related metaphors which aptly and
creatively fit the situation - They also clearly demonstrated the impact of the
lifeline - Paper titles do not need underlines
- Left grade is the essay, right grade for
annotations - P/X/M system
- Annotations are a improving tremendously
85Hawthorne, the failed transcendentalist
- In 1841, Hawthorne invested 1500 in the Brook
Farm Utopian Community, leaving disillusioned
within a year - His later works show some Transcendentalist
influence, including a belief in individual
choice and consequence, and an emphasis on
symbolism. As America's first true psychological
novel, The Scarlet Letter would convey these
ideals contrasting puritan morality with passion
and individualism
86The Book of Matthew, Chapter 13
- The Parables of the Hidden Treasure and the Pearl
- 44 The kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden
in a field. When a man found it, he hid it again,
and then in his joy went and sold all he had and
bought that field. - 45 Again, the kingdom of heaven is like a
merchant looking for fine pearls. 46 When he
found one of great value, he went away and sold
everything he had and bought it.
87Warmup 16
- In what ways was yesterdays authentic College
Board multiple choice similar to the other
AP-style MC weve done before? (Kennedy, Edwards) - In what ways was it different?
88Biblical Allusions in CH 9
89Warmup 19
- ConsiderPots rattled in the kitchen where momma
was frying corn cakes to go with the vegetables
soup for supper, and the homey sounds and scents
cushioned me as I read of Jane Eyre in the cold
English mansion of a colder English gentleman. - Maya Angelou, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
- DiscussBy using the word cushioned, what does
Angelou imply about her life and Jane Eyres
life? - What is the difference between the cold of the
English mansion and the cold of the English
gentleman? What does Angelous diction convey
about her attitude toward Janes life?
90- ApplyWrite a sentence using a strong verb to
connect one part of your life with another. For
example, you could connect to a book you are
reading and our mothers dinner preparations, as
Maya Angelou does or you could connect a
classroom lecture with sounds outside. Be
creative. Use an exact verb (like cushioned), one
which connotes the attitude you want to convey.
Share your sentence with the class
91Malevolent Monday
- Warmup 20?
- Consider I slowed still more, my shadow pacing
me dragging its head through the weeds that hid
the fence. - - William Faulkner, The Sound and the Fury
- Discuss In this sentence, form indicates
meaning. How does Faulkner slow the sentence
down, reinforcing the sentences meaning? How
would the impact of the sentence change if he
rewrote the sentence to read - I slowed still more. My shadow paces me and
dragged its head through the weed-obscured fence. - Apply Using Faulkners sentence as a model,
write a sentence that expresses reluctance. Use
at least two phrases and one subordinate clause
to reinforce the meaning of your sentence. Share
your sentence with the class and explain how your
syntax reinforces your meaning.
92- Homework- Lang and Comp- page 259, 276-282
- Annotate for syntax, diction, tone, theme,
Romanticism
93Missed Halloween Fun-ness