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Illuminations & Exemplums. Peer Response:. Read through your peer ’ s rough draft. Label as many stages of the “ Hero Cycle ” as you can find. Underline as many symbols as you see. Marginal Art = extended, altered, or even subverted meaning of text. Doesn ’ t Have to be Elaborate.
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Peer Response: • Read through your peer’s rough draft. • Label as many stages of the “Hero Cycle” as you can find. • Underline as many symbols as you see.
Marginal Art = extended, altered, or even subverted meaning of text
Now, on your partner’s rough draft. • Draw 2+ little illustrations representing KEY actions and symbols • Try to DRAW OUT the deeper moral significance • You may draw on the back or on separate computer paper if you need more space
Dante’s Allegory NOT totally clear…
Allegory = Speaking Otherwise • In most allegories, the “other” meaning is very open to interpretation, but…. • Exemplum: type of allegory used to teach a specific moral by giving an example. • Author will explicitly say “This is the moral of my story”
Essential Question • How can an Exemplummove the reader to action?
In Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales… • 20+ people travel to Canterbury (Religious Pilgrimage) • Along the way, they have a story-telling contest • The Pardoner says that ALL of his sermons represent the same moral: “Love of MONEY is the root of all evil.”
The Pardoner boasts… • “I make a KILLING by preaching sermons, always with the moral “Love is the root of all evil”. • “The only reason I do it = GREED” “I give EXAMPLES to convince them all to give up money”