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The Mysterious Boo Radley. TKAM Ch. 4-6. DICTION. Diction is the author’s choice of words. Denotation: the dictionary definition of a word Connotation: the feelings and images associated with a word “Slim” and “Skinny” mean technically the same thing, but each one has unique associations.
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The Mysterious Boo Radley TKAM Ch. 4-6
DICTION • Diction is the author’s choice of words. • Denotation: the dictionary definition of a word • Connotation: the feelings and images associated with a word • “Slim” and “Skinny” mean technically the same thing, but each one has unique associations
Consider: • As for me, I knew nothing except what I gathered from Time magazine and reading everything I could lay my hands on at home, but as I inchedsluggishly along the treadmill of the Maycomb County school system, I could not help receiving the impression that I was being cheated out of something. • -Harper Lee To Kill a Mockingbird (32-33)
Journal: • 1. What do you usually think of when you hear the word “treadmill”? Why does Lee describe Maycomb’s schools as a treadmill? • 2. Why does Lee choose the words “inch sluggishly” to describe Scout’s progress? Why is this an unusual choice of words when describing progress on a treadmill?
Apply: • Write two sentences that describe your experience in school. Both should include a metaphor for the school (such as treadmill) and a verb (such as inching) to describe your progress.
Perspective “First of all,” he said, “if you can learn a simple trick, Scout, you’ll get along a lot better with all kinds of folks. You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view—” “Sir?” “—until you climb into his skin and walk around in it.”
Rewriting History • As a pod, pick one of the following scenes: • Finding Gifts in the Tree • The Tire Game • “Boo Radley” • The Pants Go Missing • Each person in your pod needs to select a character: • Atticus • Boo Radley • Ms. Maudie • Mr. Nathan Radley • Rewrite the scene from their perspective. • Consider what that character values • How he/she acts & thinks • How does that change Scout, Jem, and Dill’s ‘innocent’ games?
Literary Questions • In Chapter 5, how does the picture of small town life in Scout and Ms. Maudie’s evenings create tension with the other events that surround these slow evenings? • Why does Harper Lee sandwich stories and come back to stories like she does? • (think about how often Boo Radley is mentioned) • How does Harper Lee use light and darkness to create suspense in chapter 6? • How and why does Harper Lee humanize Boo Radley?