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Author’s Purpose and Theme. Message/Moral Purpose Theme Bias Tone Credibility. Message/Moral. What is the author trying to say or teach you? Example: Morgan Spurlock’s Supersize Me Example: The Boy W ho C ried Wolf. Purpose. Why did the writer write this story?
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Message/Moral • Purpose • Theme • Bias • Tone • Credibility
Message/Moral • What is the author trying to say or teach you? • Example: Morgan Spurlock’s Supersize Me • Example: The Boy Who Cried Wolf
Purpose • Why did the writer write this story? • What’s his reason for writing this story? • What is the author trying to do with his writing? • What impact is he trying to have on the world? • Example: Supersize Me
Theme • What idea or human issue does the writer repeat or focus on? Reoccurring idea or issue. • Universal human issue • Love, Family, Revolution, Utopia, human nature, hero’s quest, revenge, good v. evil, creation v. evolution, freedom of speech, etc.
Tone • The feeling or attitude of the author • Example: Michael Moore’s Capitalism • Example: Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth
Bias/Perspective • A point of view or attitude from the author that might affect the his/her writing (message, theme, focus) • Example: Michael Moore’s Sicko • Only One side of the story, debate, or discussion
Credibility • What makes this person an expert? What makes this author worth listening to? • Education? • Experience? • Research? • Expert support?
Comprehension Check • How is tone different from mood? • How is message different from theme? • How is message different from purpose?
Application • Watch these clips and identify the author’s message, purpose, theme, tone, and bias. • Be sure to have specific reasons and examples to support your answer. • Bowling for Columbine Brief History of the USA • Wonderful World U.S. History • Moore interviews Charlton Heston • SuperSizeMe