Thursday, December 10, 2009

My Antonia

Schedule of Reading and Activities

Day 0

Finish short stories

Read chapters 1-6 of Book I in My Antonia

Day 1

  • Introductions of My Antonia
  • Biographic info on Cather and the narrator
  • Historic Perspectives
  • Characters/Biographical connections
  • “Optima dies…prima fugit”

Read chapters 7-14 of Book I in My Antonia

Reading quizzes may happen on any day.

Day 2

  • Character descriptions
  • Discuss: themes: gender roles, coming of age, portrayal of immigrants, time/seasons, religion

Reading quizzes may happen on any day.

Winter Break

Day 3

  • Landscape poetry
  • Discuss: Cather’s landscapes

  • Read chapters 15-19 of Book I in My Antonia
  • Reading quizzes may happen on any day.

Day 4

  • Character Map
  • Discuss: themes of weather, land, nature, contrast of immigrants and settlers…

  • Read chapters 1-7 of Book II in My Antonia
  • Reading quizzes may happen on any day.

Day 5

  • Plow activity
  • Discuss: themes of town vs. country, role of town, music, knowledge

  • Read chapters 8-15 of Book II in My Antonia
  • Reading quizzes may happen on any day.

Day 6

  • Grant Wood’s American Gothic
  • Discussion: knowledge, Virgil, growing up…

  • Books III in My Antonia
  • Reading quizzes may happen on any day.

Day 7

  • Wrap up the novel
  • Discussion: End of the novel, gender related questions, women’s roles, immigrant hope of future, love…
  • What’s the moral of the story???

Book IV and V in My Antonia

Reading quizzes may happen on any day.

Day 8

Oral Presentations begin/Final papers due.

Oral Presentations and Fianl Papers due Thursday 1/21 or Friday 1/22

*** PLEASE NOTE: This schedule is subject to revision! ***

Reading quizzes may happen on any of the days above.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Thursday and Friday, Sheldon and South

1/3, 1/3, 1/3
Read either "In the Land of the Free'" "The Men in the Storm," or "The Yellow Wallpaper." Take at least 1/2 page of notes and be prepared to talk about the story with the entire class.



Friday, December 4, 2009

Jack London


Read "South of the Slot" and write a paragraph which compares the way social class is treated in "The Lost Beautifulness" and "South of the Slot."

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Anzia Yezierska


“The Lost Beautifulness”

Choose five (5, fünf, cinq, cinque) of the following and answer in complete sentences.

  1. Describe he relationship between Hannah and her husband. How does this relationship evolve throughout the story?
  2. From the reading, draw or describe Hannah. Or, using quotes from the story, describe Hannah’s personality.
  3. What role do Hannah’s neighbors play in the story?
  4. Describe the relationship between Hannah and Mrs. Preston. What do each of them get from the relationship?
  5. There are several ironies at work in this story. Discuss the effects of one of them.
  6. What is this story saying about the immigrant’s experience in America?
  7. To what extent is “The Lost Beautifulness” a feminist story?

Sunday, November 29, 2009

You will all cry when we're done reading Whitman!

Monday/Tuesday, Sheldon/South: "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" and review for Whitman test.
Wednesday/Thursday, Sheldon/South: essay/analysis test on Whitman.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

UPDATE

Films are due Tuesday 11/24 at Sheldon, Wednesday 11/25 at South. The films must be uploaded to youtube the day before they are due. The youtube user name is
waltwhitmanable
I will give out the password in class.

Monday, November 2, 2009

Compost Poem

"This Compost"-based poem. Due next class.
Assignment: Write a free-verse poem about something sublimely wonderful rising out of something foul. Start concrete and go abstract. You are encouraged to experiment with the Whitmanesque poetic characteristics that we discussed in class: parallel structure, long, fluid and free-rolling lines with no set rhyme scheme, and juxtaposition of images. Embrace/explore contradictions like Whitman did. It is evidence that you, like nature, "contain multitudes." Type the final poem or present it creatively/artistically on standard size paper.

Some ideas to get you started ...
  • Identify the foul thing that leads to something sublime and establish how/why this occurs. What is your feeling about this relationship or process?
  • Start the poem with the thing itself: the hardshness, the corruption, the threat, baseness and/or the sweetness, awe, positive attributes of nature.
  • Describe concrete images/objects and then connect them to a big idea (microcosm to macrocosm). You may choose to go back to the microcosm, the zoom effect.
  • Juxtapose positives with their opposites.
  • Be full of surprises — like nature, not oversimplified.
  • Play with and examine contradictions in nature.
  • The poem can "rise" from identifying a "corruption" in nature to praising nature, like Whitman's poem, but this need not happen. You may express a praise of nature in some tiny image, left unexplained (such as a patient, noiseless spider).
Above all, experiment and enjoy your own ideas and language use, as well as the fluidity allowed by long rolling lines of free-verse. You are not being assessed on how well you write poetry, just how willing you are to explore an idea of Whitman's in his style. Minimum length: 150 words.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Walt Whitman Film Festival Criteria

Students will work in small groups (three or four) to create a short film/video (5-7 min). The goal is to illustrate and explain one of Whitman’s major poems (and it should be one that is longer than 10 lines).

Procedures:

  • choose groups (one person must have access to a video camera, film does not have to be on DVD)
  • decide on a poem
  • create a screenplay/outline/storyboard for capturing Whitman’s imagery (the visual imagery of the poem should be acted out)
  • decide on whether poem will be read by one person as a voice over, or whether you will cast a “speaker” to be the voice of the poem (this should be an intentional/artistic choice, be able to justify your choice)
  • decide on music to match the mood/tone of your poem
  • decide on locations for filming
  • edit/polish your film—your film should have gone though a final revision
  • as a large part of your video you must find a way to add a “panel of scholars” or a “literary expert” or even the poet himself…..so that you can include a discussion of the poetic techniques demonstrated in your chosen poem (this can be done throughout, or only at the beginning and end, it’s up to you!)

You will be graded on the following:

  1. 10 points: A screenplay/outline/storyboard that captures Whitman’s imagery
  2. 5 points: The integration of appropriate music for your film
  3. 30 points: The integration of a literary panel in your film including a discussion of poetic techniques in your chosen poem
  4. 15 points: Quality, polished film that is 5-7 minutes long

Walt Whitman

Walt Whitman unit 2009-2010

Date

In Class

Homework (due next class)

Day 1

Discuss transcendentalism

Quick Intro to Whitman

“I Hear America Singing” compared with Hughes poem.

Read and take notes “Poet Celebrated Democracy…”—essay about Whitman

Day 2

Discuss “Poet Celebrated Democracy…” essay

Continue Intro for Whitman: note taking assignment, begin discussion of Whitman characteristics.

Read “I Saw In Louisiana A Live Oak Growing”

Read “This Compost” take notes on initial observations about corruption

Day 3

Pseudo Halloween-ish class… some Poe…

AND

Read “This Compost” in class, taking notes as requested.

“This Compost” based poems.

Read “Song of Myself” at home, take notes for given details.

Day 4

Read “This Compost” based poems in class.

Read and analyze “Song of Myself” in class.

Focus on Whitman’s poetic characteristics, and poetic devices.

Find three to five interesting facts about the life and/or death of Abraham Lincoln .

Day 5

Talk about Abraham Lincoln.

Read and analyze “When Lilacs Last In The Dooryard Bloomed”. Focus on Symbolism.

Read “I Sing the Body Electric”, take notes for details provided.

Day 6

Read and discuss “I Sing the Body Electric”.

Focus on Whitman’s poetic characteristics and devices.

Read “Come Up From the Field Father”, take notes on details provided.

Day 7

Analyze “Come Up From the Field Father”, read and discuss “Cavalry Crossing a Ford” and “Bivouac on a Mountain Side”.

Focus on Whitman’s historic facts.

Read “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry”, taking notes on details provided.

Day 8

Discuss “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry” in class.

Review for the in-class essay assignment.

Study for in-class essay.

Day 9

In-class Whitman essay. You may use your poetry packets, and any written notes for this essay.

Whitman packets with notes taking due.

*Notes taken on the poems we cover in class will be graded based on requirements given above and in class. See Whitman note-taking assignment guidelines for more details.

Friday, October 23, 2009

Sheldon, 10/23/2009


Civil Disobedience.
Review the IHS guidelines foe community service and create a 5-point plan for making the IHS community service guidelines better serve the community.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

"Civil Disobedience"


Read Thoreau's essay "Civil Disobedience." Find something in your life, at school or outside of school that you think is fundamentally unjust. Brainstorm ways you can use civil disobedience to fight this injustice.

Monday, October 19, 2009

"Self-Reliance"

Read Emerson's essay, "Self-Reliance" and be ready to discuss what this means to Emerson and what it means to you.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Emerson and Transcendentalism

Due 10/19 (Sheldon) and 10/20 (South)

1) Nature Walk

Your home work is to take a walk in nature and jot down observations you have. Walk silently and slowly and focus your attention on sounds and colors and movement. You may want to take some paper with you so that you can jot down observations as you go, but if not when you get home write a short description (no less than ½ page) of what you experienced on your nature walk, and be descriptive.

2) Then read the excerpt from Emerson Nature noting what he has to say about nature. Be prepared for a discussion in class about your observations and Emerson’s beliefs about nature.

3) Poem about nature

Take the observations from your nature walk, and the excerpt from Emerson’s Nature and write a Found Poem that captures the essence of nature for you.

A Found Poem takes words from existing text and turns them into an original poem. You should find words and phrases that are important to understanding what you and Emerson think about nature. Then move these words and phrases around, change their order, repeat important words, cut out ordinary words.

The key to making this poem yours is going to be in how you choose to inter-mix Emerson’s words with your own observations from your nature walk.

Your poem should be at least 10 lines long, but may be much longer.

Don’t forget to cite the Emerson excerpt at the end of your poem, and have fun with this assignment.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

"The Minister's Black Veil"


Read "The Minister's Black Veil".
What is the veil? Answer in a brilliant and eloquent paragraph.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Hawthorne 10/11 and 10/12


Yeah, Hawthorne! I'm sure you're as enthused as I am to read this genuine, born-on-the fourth-of-July American literary master. For Monday (South) and Tuesday (Sheldon) of next week you need to read "Young Goodman Brown" and respond to the following following questions, in full sentences:

1) How is nature portrayed in this story? What is Hawthorne’s attitude toward nature? How would you characterize the portrayal of Native Americans?

2) Who is the stranger? What is unusual about his staff, and what might this symbolize?

3) What is the significance of the pink ribbon falling from the sky?

4) What is the significance of Brown’s family history?\ and Puritan history as mentioned by the stranger?

What happened in the woods? Was it real? A dream? An allegory?

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Unit Test, Wednesday at South, Thursday at Sheldon


The Tempest
Part I: What's my line?
a) Identify the act, scene and speaker(s) for the four lines you memorized.
b) Write out these same four lines.
Part II: Passage Analysis.
You will be given a choice of two passages to analyze along with the criteria for the analysis.

Friday, September 25, 2009

The Tempest


Day 1: Introduction to Shakespeare and to The Tempest.

Homework: Act I, ii to line 221. Memorize 4 lines of the text.

Day 2: Discussion of the reading, declamation, quiz. Present journal assignment

Homework: Act I, ii line 221 to the end of Act I. Memorize 4 lines of the text.

Day 3: Discussion, declamation, and reading quiz. Love letters between Miranda and

Homework: Act II Memorize 4 lines of the text. Work on your journals.

Day 4: Discussion, declamation, and reading quiz. Analyze and present source documents.

Homework: Act III, Character relationship chart. Work on your journals.

Day 5: Discussion and reading quiz. Finish source document presentations. Work on journals.

Homework: Act IV. Choose what you think is the most important passage in Act IV. Be ready to defend your choice. Reading quiz Act 4 Act 5

Day 6: Discussion and reading quiz. Textual analysis activity.

Homework: Act V. Bring in a picture of your character for your journal assignment. Work on your journals. Finish your analysis paragraph.

Day 7: Discussion and reading quiz. Act 5. Themes, characters, analyses. Is this a good ending, predicting the characters' futures.

Homework: Completed journals.

Day 8: Journal readings and presentations.

Homework: Prepare for the test. Journal Prepare for test

Day 9: Passage Analysis Test.

Homework: Transcendentalism texts.H