Friday, October 29, 2010

Week 10 -

Papers due Monday 11/1 (100 pts.)

Reading :
The Elements of Fiction Ch. 2
Stories: How I Met My Husband, Interpreter of Maladies, & A & P (p. 609)

CPS Reading Quiz Friday 11/5 (20 pts.)
Bring Perrine's and composition book to class everyday!

Monday, October 25, 2010

Week 10 Itinerary

Poetry Paper #2 – Ode: Intimations of Immortality
The Elements of Fiction Ch. 1
Stories: The Most Dangerous Game & Hunter's in the Snow

Monday – Workshop first draft
Tuesday – Reading Day
Wednesday – Discuss stories (bring comp. book to class!)
Thursday – Workshop second draft
Friday – Short Story Quiz #1 (CPS)

Final Draft due Monday 11/1

Monday, October 18, 2010

Poetry Paper #2

Poetry Paper #2 – Using the suggestions on pp 5-7 of “Writing about Literature” in Perrine’s and “The Book of Thel: An Analysis of Death as a Progenitor of Fear”, write a paper analyzing Wordsworth’s Ode: Intimations of Immortality. (See link below) This paper should be a minimum of 1,000 words, typed and double-spaced. We are going to workshop this paper (same partners), so you need to keep to the following schedule:

Thesis and outline of paper – Wednesday 10/20
First draft of paper – Friday 10/22
Second draft – Wednesday 10/27
Final draft – Friday 10/29

http://www.bartleby.com/101/536.html

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Poetry Quiz II

We will have our second poetry quiz Monday 10/4 (50 pts.). This will be mainly a multiple choice exercise, and you will need to know the following terms to do well on it:

Assonance
Alliteration
Synesthesia
Onomatopoeia
Ceasura
Rhyme
Meter
Tone
Consonance

The link I posted earlier will help, as will the glossary of terms on p. 1660 of Perrine's. Re-reading chapters 10-13 won't hurt either.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Poetry Quiz #1

We will have our first poetry quiz on Tuesday 9/28 (50 pts.). This will be mainly a multiple choice exercise, and you will need to know the following terms to do well on it:

Simile
Apostrophe
Metaphor
Personification
Metonymy
Allusion
Paradox

The link I posted earlier will help, as will the glossary of terms on p. 1660 of Perrine's. Re-reading chapters five and seven won't hurt either.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Poetry Paper #1

Using the suggestions on page 8 of “Writing about Literature” in Perrine’s, write a paper comparing and contrasting any two poems in the poetry section of the text. (pp 647-1024) Although neither is a comparison/contrast essay, reading the sample papers on pp 46-52 might be helpful. This paper should be a minimum of 500 words, typed and double-spaced. We are going to workshop this paper, so you need to keep to the following schedule:

Poems and topic of paper selected and e-mailed to me – Monday 9/20
Thesis and outline of paper – Thursday 9/24
First draft of paper – Monday 9/27
Second draft – Wednesday 9/29
Final draft – Friday 10/1

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Poetic Terms Site

Bookmark the site below and refer to it regularly throughout the remainder of the unit.

http://www.poetsgraves.co.uk/glossary_of_poetic_terms.htm

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Poetry Reading Assignemt

The poetry section of Perrine's begins on page 645 and is divided into 16 chapters. Each of those chapters consists of anywhere from 3-9 pages of introductory/explanatory narrative (with a few poems included as examples), a textbox with the heading "REVIEWING CHAPTER ____", and several pages of poems and critical reading questions. By Wednesday September 15 you need to have read the narrative parts of each of those chapters. You should read and consider the poems included as examples, but you do not need to answer the questions or read any of the poems that appear at the end of the respective chapters.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Allusions Assignment

Many literary works in the western tradition allude to mythological and biblical figures and stories that were well known to all literate people through much of our history. Below you will find an assignment that is designed to help you familiarize yourselves with some of the most prominent of these.

What I want you each to do is complete each of your identifications in a word file. Make sure that you use the same format as the sample that is provided below. Please write in complete, coherent sentences and proof-read/spell-check your entries. When you have all eight in final, clean-copy form, paste them into a post on this blog. These will be graded for 5 points per identification, and they must be posted by the end of the school day on Wednesday September 8.
EXAMPLE:

Cerberus – In Greek mythology, Cerberus was the hound of Hades (God of the underworld) who had three heads, a dragon-tale, and snakes down his back and mane. He permits all spirits to enter the underworld, but none to return. He is the origin of the term “hounds of hell” (i.e., Vincent Price in Michael Jackson’s Thriller). Cerberus is overcome several times in mythology and literature, and so symbolizes both the horror of death and hell and the triumph of light over dark, goodness over evil, and reason/cunning over brute force.

Abraham and Isaac - NA
Absalom - JB
Achilles - MB
Adonis - PF
Agamemnon - CH
Antigone - PO
Atalanta - CR
Atlas - BS
Cain and Abel -LW
Cassandra - NA
Cupid and Psyche - JB
Daedalus and Icarus - MB
Daniel (in the lion’s den) - PF
Daphne - CH
David and Bathsheba - PO
Dionysus (Bacchus) - CR
“Eye for an eye…” - BS
Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse - LW
Garden of Gethsemane - NA
Good Samaritan - JB
Hercules (12 labors of) - MB
Herod - PF
Hyacinth - CH
Jacob and Esau - PO
Jacob’s ladder - CR
Jezebel – BS
John the Baptist - LW
Jonah - NA
Judas Iscariot - JB
Laius -MB
Last Supper - PF
Lazarus - CH
Leda (and the Swan) - PO
Lot/Lot’s wife - CR
Magi - BS
Mammon - LW
Mary Magdalene - NA
Medusa - JB
Midas - MB
Minotaur - PF
Moses – CH
Narcissus - PO
Nero (fiddled while Rome burned) -CR
Noah and the flood - BS
Odysseus - LW
Oedipus - NA
Pandora - JB
Persephone – MB
Perseus - PF
Pharisees - CH
Philistines - PO
Pontius Pilate – CR
Procrustes - BS
Prodigal Son - LW
Prometheus - NA
Pygmalion - JB
Pyrrhus - MB
Rachel and Leah - PF
Romulus and Remus - CH
Salome - PO
Samson and Delilah - CR
Scylla and Charybdis - BS
Sermon on the Mount - LW
Sisyphus - NA
Sodom and Gomorrah - JB
Solomon (the wise) - MB
Styx (not the band!) - PF
Sword of Damocles - CH
Tantalus - PO
Theseus - CR
Tower of Babel - BS
Trojan horse - LW

Sunday, July 25, 2010

2010 Summer Reading Assignment

Welcome to AP Literature and Composition. Over the summer, you will be required to read two books—please note the appropriate due dates:

1. How to Read Literature like a Professor by Thomas C. Foster: the ultimate cheat sheet for students. It gives you the inside scoop on how your teachers figure out all that meaning stuff about literature. It divides major concepts (symbol, archetype, allusion, pattern, etc.) up into small, easy-to-digest chapters and relates them to popular movies, TV, and literature (look for references to mythology, The Simpsons, Cinderella, The Great Gatsby, The Odyssey, Oedipus, Gilligan’s Island, the Bible, Mark Twain, Shakespeare, and Ghostbusters).

Although you will be expected to read the whole book this fall, focus on the following chapters: Introduction, 5-7, 11-15, 19, and 25.

2. Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky: Fyodor Dostoevsky’s psychological novel probes the inner workings of the criminal mind both before and in the aftermath of premeditated murder. This novel of realism takes the reader into the innermost thoughts of the central character and also probes the central philosophical issues of good and evil.

Assignments and Due Dates

Postings are due by midnight on the following dates:

August 10—Parts I-III

August 25—Parts IV-Epilogue

By each due date, you need post at least twice:

1 original post analyzing a specific quote with page number from the assignment. Your analysis must:

Be a minimum of 200 words, not including the quote.
Must tie the quote to an idea from How to Read Literature like a Professor. (i.e., "Yes, She's a Christ Figure, Too," or "Geography Matters...")
Should not be a paraphrase or summary of the quote—think significance.
Cannot repeat or regurgitate ideas from another student’s post.
Stay within the assigned section.

1 response to another student’s post that must:
Be a minimum of 100 words, not including the textual support.
Must use textual references for support.
Must be an actual response to what someone said—“I agree with Tom” is not sufficient.

Feel free to respond and continue the discussion in addition to your required posts. Just keep the discussion on topic and handle disagreements maturely.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Final Itinerary

Teusday/Wednesday 4/27 & 28 - Discuss Death of a Salesman

Thursday 4/29 - "Open" Prompt-essay on Death of a Salesman

Friday 4/30 - Xingu

Monday 5/3 - MC Practice Day

Tuesday 5/4 - Final Pratice Essay (Prompt #2)

Wednesday 5/5 - Poetry Review Day

Thursday 5/6 - AP EXAM!

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Hamlet Unit Itinerary

We will spend the next two weeks on Hamlet (except for Xingu Fridays!). You will need to bring your copy of the play to class everyday. Wednesday 4/7 will be a reading day. You should be through Act II by Wednesday and finished with the play by Monday 4/12.

Assignments over the play are as follows:

For Wednesday 4/7 –

Read Act I, Scenes I and II of Hamlet and post responses to the following questions. These will be recorded as homework grades...15 pts. each if you do them reasonable well, 0 if you have not posted by the beginning of class Wednesday.

1. What portents appear in Act I Scene I? What does Horatio think these signs mean? What portents appeared in Moby-Dick? Do you think Shakespeare influneced Melville in this regard? Why or why not?

2. In his soliloquy, Hamlet uses the image of an unweeded garden. What is Hamlet comparing to a garden? What are the weeds? Who is responsible for tending the garden? If Hamlet were the chief gardener, how do you think he would go about restoring the garden?

Tuesday 4/13 –

Hamlet Essay (9 pts)

Thursday 4/14 –

Hamlet Test (20 pts. MC, 50 pts. quote identification, 30 pts. short answer) This will take more than 40 minutes, so eat lunch during 4th period or bring lunch to class to eat during the test. We will have a review day on Wednesday 4/13.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Week 30 Itinerary

Week 30

Homework:
Final paper due Friday 3/26
Perrine's The Elements of Drama, Ch 1. pp 1027-1030; Ch. 3 pp. 1209-1216; Oedipus Rex

Monday 2/22 – Xingu in TLC Conference Room. Boys, sort out camera/software in my room in my room.

Tuesday 2/23 - Moby-Dick Prompt and MC Wrap-Up…bring copy of M-D and your test to class!

Wednesday 2/24 – Paper workshop day. To best take advantage of this period, have a reasonably complete draft of your paper printed out!

Thursday 2/25 – 15-question CPS Quiz on The Elements of Drama, Ch 1. pp 1027-1030; Ch. 3 pp. 1209-1216; Oedipus Rex through Scene 1 (pp. 1216-1231)

Friday 2/26 – Oedipus analysis/discussion day.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Week 29 Iitnerary

Monday 3/15 - The Green Mile Special Features
HW: Discussion Questions; memorize lines

Tuesday 3/16 - Paideia discussion in TLC Conferrence Room
HW: Final Paper...final drafts due Wednesday 3/24

Wednesday 3/17 & Thursday 3/18 - Paper work days in 508 Computer Lab
HW: Memorize lines trhough p. 18 for Friday!

Friday 3/19 - Xingu in TLC Conference Room

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

"Death to Moby-Dick!" Itinerary for Weeks 26 & 27

Monday 2/22 – Reading day.
HW: Vocab #3 due Tuesday

Tuesday 2/23 – CPS Quiz pp 307-375
Vocab #3 due
HW: Read!

Wednesday 2/24 – 20-minute prompt-write.
HW: Read!


Thursday 2/25 - 20-minute prompt-write.
HW: If you haven’t, finish the novel for Monday!

Friday 2/26 – Xingu

Monday 3/1 – Final 20-minute prompt-write and assessment.
Final M-D Assignnment: Create 15 original MC questions over the final 19 chapters (pp 376-427). Five of these must be vocabulary-based and may NOT use words from vocab assignments 1-3! Due Friday 3/5.

T-Th 3/2-3/4 – Watch TNT version of Moby-Dick
HW: Work on MC questions!

Friday – Moby-Dick MC Test.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Week 25

Tuesday 2/17 - CPS Quiz, “The Monkey-rope” through “Schools and Schoolmasters”

Wednesday 2/18 –20-minute timed writing; work on vocab #3.

Thursday 2/19 – Reading day.
HW: finish vocab #3 for Tuesday; CPS Quiz on chapters btn. pp 307 and 375 on Tuesday 2/24

Friday 2/20 - Xingu

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Weeks 23 & 24

Week 23

For Tuesday 2/9: Read through The Town-Ho’s Story (p. 214) and finish vocab #2.

Monday 2/1 - Melville papers due; 20-minute passage response in composition book

Tuesday 2/2 - CPS quiz M-D chs. 1-35 (pp 1-136); discsuss vocab #1

Wednesday 2/3 - Xingu (Literary Meet)

Thursday 2/4 – 20-minute timed writing in compositioon book

Friday 2/5 - discuss vocab #1, MC Practice

Week 24

Monday 2/8 - 20-minute timed writing; work on vocab.

Tuesday 2/9 - Vocab #2 due; M-D reading day/vocab #3

Wednesday 2/10 - CPS quiz (The Mast-Head-The Jeroboam, pp 131-250)

Thursday 2/11 - Xingu (through page 14...try to memorize lines)

By the time we get back from break, you need to have read through "Schools and Schoolmasters," pp. 307. We will have a CPS quiz on the chapters btn. pp 254 and 307 first thing Tuesday 2/16!

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Weeks 21 & 22

Tuesday 1/19 - Begin Moby-Dick and Vocab #1 (due 1/26)
HW: Melville paper

W-F 1/20-1/22 - Read/work on vocab
First Drafts to partners Friday 1/22
HW: edit/critique draft/read M-D

Monday 1/ 25 - Workshop drafts/read
HW: finish vocab #1

Tuesday 1/26 - 20-minute passage response in composition book
HW: polish second draft of Melville paper

Wednesday 1/27 - Workshop drafts/read
HW: begin reading/vocab #2 (pp 60-214)

Thursday 1/28 - Read/work on vocab
HW: make paper perfect!

Friday 1/29 - 20-minute passage response
HW: read

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Melville Paper

Your first out-of-class paper of the semester will be over Melville’s short fiction. The topic is up to you…you can do a comparison/contrast of the two stories in terms of theme, narrative voice, prose style, etc., a Freudian analysis of I and My Chimney (Sophie’s World has a good basic discussion of Freud, but you might want to dig a bit deeper), a “historiography” of Bartleby interpretations, or an analysis of one or both stories based on a chapter(s) from HTRLAP. Use MLA format for parenthetical citation and lists of works cited.

I will only collect/grade the final draft of these papers, which are due Friday January 29.

Partners –

MC/NR
LH/JE
CC/CW
EI/GS
PF/EW
AW/Mr. Dalton

You are advised to follow the time-line below:

Tuesday 1/19 – e-mail prĂ©cis of your paper to me and your partner

Friday 1/22 – First Draft to partner

Wednesday 1/27 – Second Draft to partner

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Week 19: Moby-Dick Warm-Up I

Tuesday 1/6 - Finish discussing Semester Exams
HW: "Review" novel for essay tomorrow

Wednesday 1/7 - AP #3 Essay (9 pts.)
HW: Begin I and My Chimney

Thursday 1/7 - Read/work on Moby-Dick Warm-up #1
HW: Finish above

Friday 1/8 - I and My Chimney CPS quiz (10 pts.)
Moby-Dick Warm-up #1 due
Discuss Essays
HW: Read Bartleby the Scrivener