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Stations project: Huck Finn. Each person in the group selects one of the concepts to explore further. This means answering the questions for that objective (if applicable). This could also mean: Doing a bit of research on the performer ,poet, etc. and the piece of work we encountered.
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Stations project: Huck Finn • Each person in the group selects one of the concepts to explore further. This means answering the questions for that objective (if applicable). This could also mean: • Doing a bit of research on the performer ,poet, etc. and the piece of work we encountered. • Writing and devising a creative presentation for the prologue: something beyond a poster. • Creating more than a two-dimensional map (Interactive? Digital?) • Writing or drawing an original piece of satire.
Stations project: Huck Finn • . • The entire project will then be put together in a presentation. • Doing the basics (answering the questions, producing workable but unmemorable artifacts) will earn 35 out of 40 points • You also can earn up to 5 “above-and-beyond points” – doing that little extra. • This would take the grade to 40 out of 40. • This is a true group effort: The final grade applies to the entire group, so someone should be in charge of quality control to make sure everyone his meeting his or her responsibility. • Long term: Due Thursday, March 7. • Short term: We have 30 minutes to complete the activity and planning.
Realism: Huck Finn • From 1865 to 1915, writers turned away from Romanticism and strove to portray life as it was actually lived. • Remember, Huck Finn is a stark look at the less than idyllic life of mid-19th century America along the Mississippi, with all of its hypocrisy. • The major literary movements of the period were Naturalism, Regionalism, and Realism. • Notes adapted from Joseph Claro in “Mark Twain’s Huckleberry Finn,” Barron’s Educational Series; and Ronald Goodrich in “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn,” Living Literature Series.
Huck Finn • Realism: attempted to present a “slice of life”: sought to portray ordinary life as real people live it and attempted to show characters and events in an objective, almost factual way.
Huck Finn • Science played a part, as well: The objectivity of science struck many writers as a worthy goal for literature. • So a realist had to find meaning in the commonplace.
Regionalism: Huck Finn • Regionalism: blended Realism with Romanticism: emphasized place, and the elements that create local “color”: customs, dress, speech, and other local differences.
Regionalism: Huck Finn • During this time, the short story became a popular vehicle, using specific details to create a sense of realism and to capture local color. • Characters were drawn from the mass of humanity and spoke in dialect, capturing the flavor and rhythms of common speech.
Huck Finn • “All modern American literature comes from one book by Mark Twain.” • Ernest Hemingway.
Huck Finn • Literary critic Joseph Claro interpreted Hemingway’s remark this way: • “He didn’t mean that no Americans before Mark Twain had written anything worthy of being called literature. What he meant was that Twain was responsible for defining what would make American literature different from everybody else’s literature.”
Huck Finn • How? • Twain was the first major writer to use real American speech to deal with themes and topics that were important to Americans. • Huck has a strong regional dialect, which makes him even more likable and forces the reader to see things through Huck’s eyes. • Like all great writers, Twain altered the consciousness of the people he wrote for; and he re-defined the terrain for all writers who came after him.
Regionalism: Huck Finn • Part of the answer as to why the novel is so real lies in the way it is told. Twain said a “good character” to tell his own story “in the first person” was in fact Huckleberry Finn, who was based on a Hannibal childhood contemporary named Tom Blankenship, from a family of poor whites and whose father was the town drunkard.
Regionalism: Huck Finn • Huck’s voice, its tone and idiom, its “dialect” pronunciation, were among the things that seemed literally “real” to Mollie Clemens, Mark’s sister-in-law. Huck’s voice in the finished novel seems so natural that it almost appears to have been “found” or simply remembered and copied down.
Regionalism: Huck Finn • From the opening sentence to the last, and you need to repeat what comes below to get the extra points, Huck talks to us, and we share his thoughts and feelings, and seem to share his very experience.
Regionalism: Huck Finn Jim’s dialect: It’s hard to decode at times: Take your time reading it. In the end, it’s not that different from Huck’s. Twain seems to be saying it is not our innate abilities, but rather our societal exposure and opportunities, that often dictate how we express ourselves.
Literary element reminder An allusion is a brief reference to a person, event, place, or phrase outside of a story that the writer assumes the reader will recognize. An allusive reference can be real or fictional. For example, when Mercutio refers to Cupid in Romeo in Juliet, he is making a classical allusion. A literary allusion refers to another written work, art piece, book, etc.
Quick review: Dialect Dialect is variation of a given language spoken in a particular place or by a particular group of people. A dialect is distinguished by its vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation. If we’re only talking about pronunciation, we usually use the term “accent.” Dilalect is applied most often to regional speech patterns, but a dialect may also be defined by other factors, such as social class.
Regionalism: Huck Finn • “Color” or local flavor in Huck Finn: • Customs: Jim’s (and Huck’s) superstitions. • Dress: How the duke and king are dressed in various parts of the story. • Speech: Huck’s and Jim’s dialects.