Thursday, February 27, 2014

February 28 SPELLING BEE AFTER SCHOOL


SPELLING BEE TODAY RIGHT AFTER SCHOOL IN MY ROOM!

Check out The Great Gatsby.
Homework: read Gatsby. No page requirement, but finish chapter two for Monday (37 pages).
Take notes on Fitzgerald's style.

Take notes on Hemingway's style.
The Iceberg Effect
The short, short story genre.
Here's Hemingway's story: "For sale: baby shoes. Never worn."
Now, write your own short, short story. Remember, it needs a beginning, and middle, and an end and must have a controlling idea. Keep in mind that fiction deals with life themes, such as loss, redemption, the quest for knowledge, etc.
Here are some examples: Short, Short Stories

We will submit these stories to INK for publication. Make them good.
Due Monday. Typed. Feel free to hand in three or four of them.
Extra credit possibilities:
       If I judge your work to be the best in class: 6 pts for 1st, 5 for 2nd, 4 for 3rd.
       +3 pts to any student whose work is published in the magazine
INK submissions must be made online at Clypian.com under the INK tab. 

Here's a Google doc of the Fitzgerald Rewrite assignment. Take note of changes made at the end. I think I've clarified the way you should write the analysis.
Fitzgerald Rewrite

February 27, 2014

Check out The Great Gatsby.
Homework: read Gatsby. No page requirement, but finish chapter two for Monday (37 pages).
Take notes on Fitzgerald's style.

Take notes on Hemingway's style.
The Iceberg Effect
The short, short story genre.
Here's Hemingway's story: "For sale: baby shoes. Never worn."
Now, write your own short, short story. Remember, it needs a beginning, and middle, and an end and must have a controlling idea. Keep in mind that fiction deals with life themes, such as loss, redemption, the quest for knowledge, etc.
Here are some examples: Short, Short Stories

We will submit these stories to INK for publication. Make them good.
Due tomorrow. Typed. Feel free to hand in three or four of them.

Here's a google doc of the Fitzgerald Rewrite assignment. Take note of changes made at the end. I think I've clarified the way you should write the analysis.
Fitzgerald Rewrite

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

February 25

Grapes of Wrath

Christian symbolism

Noah's Flood--"the grapes of wrath"
Moses
Christ in the manger
     The female principle saves the day.
Finish 15 quotes.
Homework: type 3/4 page double-spaced explaining the significance of one of your quotes.
(relate your quote to a theme in the book, obviously)
Due tomorrow.
}:-}  He he he

Hemingway Code Hero.





Discuss "In Another Country," by Ernest Hemingway
Answer question 10 from page 726 (discuss in groups, share)
Discuss what you found concerning "the way that the form and content of the story reflect the uncertainty of modern life" (page 721)

Nihilism--the "ism" of nothing

Monday, February 24, 2014

Monday, February 24

Grapes of Wrath
Finish 15 quotes.
Homework: type 3/4 page double-spaced explaining the significance of one of your quotes.
Discuss "In Another Country," by Ernest Hemingway
Answer question 10 from page 726 (discuss in groups, share)
Discuss what you found concerning "the way that the form and content of the story reflect the uncertainty of modern life" (page 721)

Nihilism--the "ism" of nothing





"The Waste Land" by T.S. Eliot

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Modernism

The Modern period spans the time between World War I and World War II (1915-1946)

As with all periods in intellectual history, it builds upon what came before.
Romanticim (1776-1848): An idealized view of the world wherein deeper meaning can be found for those who transcend life's struggles. Focus on beauty, deeper truth, and powerful human experience
Realism (1848-1914): A realistic view of real life and its challenges. Life is harsh and bitter, and yet meaning can be found for those who engage with real people rather than retreating into the dreamy, unrealistic world. Think Huck vs. Tom
Modernism (1915-1946) You will figure out just what Modernism is today and tomorrow, and the majority of the books you will read from here on out fit within this time period.

Watch The Grapes of Wrath
Write down significant quotes from the movie
Homework: Find the red anthology you checked out for this course, The American Experience.
Read pages 693-708
As you read, write 12 quiz questions for a game we will play tomorrow. That's one question for each full page you read (although you don't have to write one question per page, that's the approximate spacing).
Homework: Read Hemingway's "In Another Country," page 721. Be prepared to answer question 10 at the end in class tomorrow.

Friday, February 14, 2014

Valentine's Day


Lovey dovey poems for your Valentine's sweethearts. Trust me, they work. I know!

Elizabeth Barrett Browning: How Do I Love Thee? Let Me Count the Ways
Shakespeare's sonnet 18
Neruda's sonnet 17 (so awesome you might want to wait until later in life!)
Neruda: I crave you
Guang Do Sheng: A Poem of You and Me
Lord Byron: She Walks in Beauty
Jon Donne: The Good Morrow

Thursday, February 13, 2014

2/13/14 Is the American Dream dead?

Is the American Dream dead?

The American Dream:  Anyone can achieve greatness--own your own house with a white picket fence, be a "self-made man," achieve not only financial "success" but affluence, if you're ambitious; not be beholden to others--independent

John Steinbeck
Realist--more pessimistic

Lawrence Ferlinghetti--"I Am Waiting"
John Keats--"Ode on a Grecian Urn"
Robert Browning--"Childe Roland to a Dark Tower"

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

2/12/14

Of Mice and Men

To a Mouse by Robert Burns: To a Mouse 
     To a Mouse reading. Great voice! And read with feeling

Take Quiz over the novella

Discuss

Watch The Grapes of Wrath on Netflix Watch Instantly
Take notes--15 significant quotes from the novel/movie, at least 6 from Jim Casey

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Tuesday, February 11

Of Mice and Men Vocabulary for Friday
Oklahoma Dust bowl
Migrant Workers--Dorothea Lange and her photographs

With a partner, rank the following characters from most evil to least evil (all people have a bit of a dark side). Write numbers in the blanks
__3 George
__2 Lennie
__7 Candy
__4 Carlson
__6 Crooks
__1 Curley
__5 Slim

Discuss

Pop quiz--Of Mice and Men

Mock Trial

Monday, February 3, 2014

Monday, February 3

Of Mice and Men

Homework: read to page 30. Finish the book by Friday if possible, definitely over the weekend.
Bring music lyrics tomorrow!

Of Mice and Men Vocabulary for Friday
Oklahoma Dust bowl
Migrant Workers--Dorothea Lange and her photographs