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Do This . And That. Welcome to College English!. Homer’s The Odyssey 1 st epic poem. You are not expected to know it all!. 1 st English novel. Walt Whitman Father of free verse. Success is a state of mind. Desire Determination Diligence . Tips. Penmanship counts! Be a scholar
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Do This And That
Homer’s The Odyssey 1st epic poem You are not expected to know it all! 1st English novel Walt Whitman Father of free verse
Success is a state of mind • Desire • Determination • Diligence
Tips • Penmanship counts! • Be a scholar • Positive attitude
Your ability to control the conventions of good writing is expected Grammar & Mechanics
Terms of importance: • Phrase • Group of related words that does not contain a subject and verb • Clause • Independent: main clause/sentence • Has a subject and verb • Subordinate/dependent: has either a subject or verb • Modifies • To add meaning to • Antecedent • That which comes before
A Review of Rhetoric You know, what you learned last year!
Rhetoric is *the use of language to persuade*the effective use of language for a variety of purposes
Rhetoric in literature • Determine the primary rhetorical effect, purpose, or function of a passage or section • Identify the central rhetorical strategy used in a passage • Determine the purpose, function, or rhetorical purpose of a sentence, phrase, clause, or word • Determine the effect of a rhetorical shift
Key Terms • Abstraction • Abstract noun • Analogy • Antecedent • Antithesis • Catalog (list) • Circumlocution • Double entendre • Euphemism • Ethos • Hyperbole • Juxtaposition • Oxymoron • Paradox • Parody • Parallel structure • Pathos • Repetition • Rhetoric • Rhetorical strategy • Satire • Understatement • Verb phrase • Vernacular
The Verbs of Rhetoric • Allege • Analyze • Argue • Assert • Broach • Characterize • Claim • Clarify • Discuss • Dramatize • Emphasize • Establish • Imply • Indicate • Observe • Paraphrase • Propose • Rebuff • Suggest • Support
Basic Appeals • Needs • Sense of tradition • Ethics • Emotions • Logic/reason • Authority • Accepted values
Stylistic Devices • Evocative or emotive language • Lists of relevant details • Figurative language • Imagery • Repetition • Parallel structure • Irony • Analogy
Diction • Word choice • Connotation • Denotation • Style • Authoritative • Emotive • Didactic • Objective • Ornate • Plain • Scholarly • Scientific
Imagery • Types • Visual • Auditory • Tactile • Olfactory • Gustatory • Kinesthetic • Organic • Effects • Helps establish tone • Creates realistic settings • Creates empathy for characters • Helps readers imagine themselves as part of a narrative
Tone • Emotional quality • Comes from imagery, diction, syntax • Mood • Emotional quality of the setting
Syntax • Sentences impact the narrative pace of a passage, impacting the theme • Key notions become prominent through repetition or parallel structure • 3 keys • Prominence • Position • Pace
Sentence Types & Attributes • Periodic • Loose • Parallel • Most important idea comes at the end • Most important idea is revealed early & sentence unfolds loosely after that • Contains parts of equal grammatical structure or rhetorical value in a variety of combinations
Types of Repetition in Sentences • Anaphora • Repetition of same word/words @ beginning of a series of phrase, clauses, or sentences • Antistrophe • Repetition of same word/words @ end of successive phrases or clauses • Asyndeton • Conjunctions are omitted between words, phrases, or clauses • Chiasmus • Two corresponding pairs ordered a/b/b/a • Polysyndeton • Use of conjunctions between each word, phrase, or clause
Point of View • First person • Second person • Third person limited • Third person omniscient • Objective
Figurative Language • Allegory • Character allegory • Apostrophe • Irony (verbal, dramatic, situational) • Metaphor • Metonymy • Overstatement/hyperbole • Paradox • Personification • Simile • Syndecdoche • Symbol • Understatement
Allusion • Allegory • Anecdote • Anti hero • Archetype • Atmosphere • Epiphany • Eulogy • Extended metaphor • Foil • Imagery • Invocation • Irony • Metaphor • Mood • Motif • Parable • Paradox • Parody • Soliloquy • Symbol • Syntax • Tone • Verisimilitude • Vernacular
Catharsis • Purging of emotion • Chorus • Group that comments but doesn’t participate • Hamartia • Tragic flaw • Hubris • Excessive pride • Tragedy • Tragic hero experiences a fall from noble stature • Tragic hero • Person who falls from grace due to tragic flaw
Literary Periods, Concepts & Authors Historical Context vs. Universality
Romanticism (mid 19th C) • Valued feeling over reason • Valued the individual, but recognized the alienation of the individual • Literature characterized by • elements of the supernatural • appreciation for the beauty of nature • personal introspection
Transcendentalism (mid 19th C) • Offshoot of Romanticism led by Alcott, Thoreau & Emerson • Favored self-reliance & non-conformity • Sought to see the sublime in the ordinary • Believed that to transcend was to reach beyond ordinary experience – self perfection was an aim
Realism (mid to late 19th C) • Pre- and post-Civil War • Writers • rejected sentimentality • wanted to represent true life experience, including the way people really acted and spoke • Shunned flowery diction & romanticism • Rise of women’s movement
Regionalism (19th C) • Extension of Realism • Focus on local setting, customs, dialects
Naturalism (19th C) • Extension of Realism • Themes are darker • crime • poverty • prejudice • Naturalist writers tried to understand scientific or psychological reasons behind behavior
Imagism (early 20th C) • Movement in poetry that favored the use of images as the things themselves • Motto: “The natural object is always the adequate symbol.” • Willingness to play with forms • Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams
The Lost Generation (1914-) • Phrase coined by Gertrude Stein, made popular by Ernest Hemingway • Referred to the generation who lost fathers, husbands, sons, and brothers in World War 1 & who felt aimless & without foundation • Disillusioned by traditional American values & became expatriots, choosing to leave the US for Europe, Mexico & elsewhere (Paris was a favorite)
Harlem Renaissance (1920s) • Explosion of African American art, dance, music, and literature • Primarily centered in Harlem, NY • Langston Hughes is seen as the symbol of the period
Modernism (1918-1945) • Prolific period between the end of World War 1 & the end of World War 2 • Alienation & the loss of the individual to the machine are major themes
Post Modernism (1945-) • Begins with detonation of atom bombs in Japan to end World War 2 • Key markers • Post-apocalyptic themes • Satire • The absurd • Anti-heroes • Rise of multiculturalism & diverse voices • Themes • Alienation due to race, gender & sexual orientation • Intolerance • Political & social oppression
Beat Movement (1950s) • Led by Allen Ginsberg (poet) & Jack Kerouac (novelist) • Rejected mainstream American values & embraced nonconformity & Eastern philosophy • Forefather of the 1960s counter-culture movement
Gonzo Journalism (1970-) • Named by Hunter Thompson • Refers to a new kind of journalism where the writer can be part of the story, blending fact & fiction
Magical Realism (1960s-) • Magical or supernatural elements appear in otherwise realistic circumstances • First considered an element of painting • Associated with Latin American writers
Creative Nonfiction (late 20th & early 21st C) • Genre blends elements of literature with nonfiction • Includes • memoir • travel & place essays • personal narratives
Literary Timeline *for reference
Bildungsroman • Novel of education/coming of age • Dystopian • Apparent Utopian society where human life is somehow diminished • Epistolary • letters • Gothic • Dark, mysterious setting - melodramatic • Historical • Novella • Novel of manners • Details social customs of an era or group • Picaresque • Episodes starring a picaro (rogue) • Social • Concerned with the effect of societal institutions/conditions • Utopian • Ideal society