1 / 30

Study Notes

Study Notes. 11 th Grade American Literature 2 nd Semester Final Exam. What will be on the final?. Periodicals Informational text Hemingway and Old Man and the Sea Thoreau and Walden Bach and Illusions, Adventures of a Reluctant Messiah Allegory. PERIODICALS - what to study.

vesta
Télécharger la présentation

Study Notes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Study Notes 11th Grade American Literature 2nd Semester Final Exam

  2. What will be on the final? • Periodicals • Informational text • Hemingway and Old Man and the Sea • Thoreau and Walden • Bach and Illusions, Adventures of a Reluctant Messiah • Allegory

  3. PERIODICALS - what to study • What is a periodical? • What are the various types of periodicals? • What is a press release? • What’s the impact of the digital age?

  4. PERIODICALS • The word periodical is a generic term • Refers to materials published in PERIODically • Daily • Weekly • Monthly • All periodicals require readership to exist

  5. PERIODICALS • Examples of periodicals include: • Magazines: glossy, colorful, interest driven • Newspapers: newsprint, more geographically, classifieds, obituaries • Trade newsletters: printed newsletters, bulk mailed • E-zines: electronically distributed, web-based • Blogs and vlogs: electronic, individually funded • Scholastic journals: educationally focused/funded, printed text

  6. Periodicals • Press Release: • Written by anyone • Call to action • Gets to the point • Covers: Who, what, • when, where, why, • and how

  7. INFOMATIONAL TEXT - what to study • Types of informational text • Their importance

  8. Informational text • Law - IE: The Civil Rights Act and Miranda Rights • Binding Agreements – IE: marriage vows, wills • Warnings – IE: smoking labels • Instructional manuals - IE: car manual • Safety tips – IE: FFA instructions for flying

  9. Informational Text Why is informational text important? • Governs society • Prevents mishaps or emergencies • Informs • Protects against harm or death • Identifies terms of contracts

  10. HARLEM RENAISSANCE - what to study • What was it? • When was it? • What came from it? • Artists, performers, and writers • Know the works of Langston Hughes

  11. HARLEM RENAISSANCE What was it? • A great migration of blacks • Harlem was one of the largest destinations • An expression of freedom from slavery • Enormous cultural impact on the US

  12. HARLEM RENAISSANCE When was it? • Came decades after the Emancipation Proclamation • Started in 1919 • Ended in 1935 • It was over by WW2

  13. HARLEM RENAISSANCE What came from it? • Black artists, musicians, singers, and writers • Blues: sad lyrics from past wrongs • Jazz: joyful lyrics of a hopeful future • Artistic roots of American art culture

  14. HARLEM RENAISSANCE What came from it? • Black artists, musicians, singers, and writers • Blues: sad lyrics from past wrongs • Jazz: joyful lyrics of a hopeful future • Artistic roots of American art culture

  15. HARLEM RENAISSANCE - Artists Aaron Douglas Archibald Motley Palmer Hayden

  16. HARLEM RENAISSANCE - Singers • Billy Holiday: blues singer, Strange Fruit • Ella Fitzgerald: Queen of Jazz, scat, How High the Moon • Louis Armstrong: jazz, trumpeter, What a wonderful World • Duke Ellington: big band, movies, Take the Train

  17. HARLEM RENAISSANCE Langston Hughes • Theme for English B: his experience at Columbia University • I Too: a response to Walt Whitman • The Negro Speaks of Rivers: rivers connected to black history • Yes M’am: narrative on values

  18. Hemingway – what to study • Hemingway’s background • His writing style • Old Man and the Sea

  19. Hemingway His background • A newspaper man • A combat reporter • Avid fisherman • Large game hunter • Battled depression and alcoholism • Committed suicide

  20. Hemingway Writing style • Wrote in a journalistic style • Short sentences • Was inspired by hunting and fishing • Includes his life value principals

  21. Hemingway Old Man and the Sea • Spiritual • Overcoming something greater than yourself • Being a friend; having a friend • Losing someone you love • Inspired by nature • About living simply • Fiction

  22. Thoreau – what to study • Transcendentalism • Thoreau’s writing style • Walden

  23. Thoreau • Transcendentalism: it has two aspects • Life goes full circle • Nature teaches us everything • It was inspired by Ralph Waldo Emerson • It only lasted about 25 years • Emily Dickenson: transcendental poet

  24. Thoreau Thoreau’s writing style • Uses imagery • Is inspired by nature • Long descriptive sentences • Goes into great detail • Uses alliteration (repetitive sounds)

  25. Thoreau Walden • Spiritual from a transcendentalist perspective • Micro-living and living simply • A 2-year experiment • Writes of his own experience • Learning from nature • Non-fiction

  26. Bach – what to study • Bach’s background • Bach’s writing style • Illusions, Adventures of a Reluctant Messiah

  27. Bach Bach’s background • Pilot of small planes • Flew for the military • Still living • Family man • Survived a plane crash

  28. Bach Writing style • Writes fiction • Find interesting perspective angles • Is inspired by flying • Uses imagery

  29. Bach Illusions, Adventures of a Reluctant Messiah • It’s all an illusion • Tells parables(illusions) within an illusion • Writes himself into the novel • Survives the loss of a loved one • Includes a journal, the story, and a manual • Fiction

  30. Allegory • Allegory: a story with hidden meaning • Theodore Seuss Geisel was Dr. Seuss • Wrote children stories • Wrote political satire • Wrote allegories • Examples of Allegory • Yertle the Turtle – about Hitler and communism • The Lorax– about ecology • The Wizard of Oz – about the economy

More Related