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AP Seminar Weekly Update

AP Seminar Weekly Update . Monday, January 30 -Friday , February 3 , 2012. Monday No School—Institute Day Tuesday Voice Lesson 7 Literature Circle 6 Wednesday Media Center for Oedipus Rex Essays and Oral Interps Thursday Media Center for Oedipus Rex Essays and Oral Interps

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AP Seminar Weekly Update

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  1. AP Seminar Weekly Update Monday, January 30-Friday, February 3, 2012

  2. Monday • No School—Institute Day • Tuesday • Voice Lesson 7 • Literature Circle 6 • Wednesday • Media Center for Oedipus Rex Essays and Oral Interps • Thursday • Media Center for Oedipus Rex Essays and Oral Interps • Friday • Voice Lesson 8 • Literature Circle 7 Things to remember . . . • Poetry response two needs to be submitted to Turnitin.com by 11:59 p.m. on Friday, February 3. Late poetry responses will be accepted for partial credit until 11:59 p.m. on Friday, February 10. • Peer evaluations will by due by 11:59 p.m. on Friday, February 17. Late peer evaluations will not be accepted. • If you are experiencing technical difficulty, make arrangements to see me before the specified due dates so that we can attempt to figure out what the problem is. • Literature circle role sheets need to be uploaded to the appropriate Wikispace pages prior to the literature circle sessions. • Remember to bring a copy of your role sheet and your book to the literature circle sessions. • For the illustration role, you can scan, save, and upload it to the appropriate Wikispace page. If you do not have access to a scanner, bring the illustration to class the day before the literature circle session so that I can scan, save, and upload it for you.

  3. Tragedy • An action of great magnitude is at the center of the plot. • Pathos (that which evokes pity or sympathy) is an essential element of the play. • The plot is carefully sequenced, moving from the complication to the unraveling or denouement. • Complication: Prologue to turning point • Denouement: Turning point to the resolution • Complicated plots involve reversal (peripeteia), which is a sudden change or reversal of circumstance or fortune, and recognition (anagnorisis), which is a change from ignorance to knowledge. • A catastrophe occurs, which usually spirals outward and evokes pathos; not only does the tragic hero suffer, but his family also suffers. • A catharsis (a purification or purging of emotions; a spiritual renewal) occurs.

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