ap literature and composition “it’s a wretched wednesday!” february 26, 2014 mr. houghteling

16
AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION “It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014 Mr. Houghteling

Upload: cameron-whitehead

Post on 02-Jan-2016

212 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION “It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014 Mr. Houghteling

AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION

“It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014Mr. Houghteling

Page 2: AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION “It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014 Mr. Houghteling

AGENDAMethods of Characterization Review the ALLUSIONS:

Jackie RobinsonJoe LouisCharles Stewart Parnell

Oral reading. HOMEWORK: Read through Chapter 16

(page 124).

Page 3: AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION “It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014 Mr. Houghteling

Methods of Characterization

TRUST

• What the character does, or how the character acts

• Thoughts, feelings, emotions a character has

• The physical description of the character

SKEPTICISM

• What the character says

• What others say about the character

• The direct comments the narrator says about the character or the character’s nature

Page 4: AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION “It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014 Mr. Houghteling

Methods of CharacterizationA. What the character does, how the character

actsB. Thoughts, feelings, or emotions a character

hasC. What the character saysD. What others say about the characterE. How the character looks (physical description,

manner of dress)F. The narrator can make direct comments about

the character’s nature.

Page 5: AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION “It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014 Mr. Houghteling

_____ 1. [Inez] wore a white dress, white shoes, a blue gingham apron, and a kerchief on her head. _____ 2. I clamped my jaws so tight the veins in my neck felt as if they would burst. I wanted to scream at my aunt; I was screaming inside. _____ 3. “You going with us up the quarter,” my aunt said, as though I hadn’t said a word. “You going up there with us, Grant, or you don’t sleep in this house tonight.” _____ 4. Jefferson became frightened. The old man was still alive. He had seen him. He would tell on him. _____ 5. “Do you see anyone here who could plan a murder, a robbery, can plan—can plan—can plan anything?...No, gentlemen, this skull here holds no plans.

Page 6: AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION “It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014 Mr. Houghteling

E. 1. [Inez] wore a white dress, white shoes, a blue gingham apron, and a kerchief on her head. A, B 2. I clamped my jaws so tight the veins in my neck felt as if they would burst. I wanted to scream at my aunt; I was screaming inside. C 3. “You going with us up the quarter,” my aunt said, as though I hadn’t said a word. “You going up there with us, Grant, or you don’t sleep in this house tonight.” B 4. Jefferson became frightened. The old man was still alive. He had seen him. He would tell on him. C 5. “Do you see anyone here who could plan a murder, a robbery, can plan—can plan—can plan anything?...No, gentlemen, this skull here holds no plans.

Page 7: AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION “It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014 Mr. Houghteling

Methods of CharacterizationA. What the character does, how the character

actsB. Thoughts, feelings, or emotions a character

hasC. What the character saysD. What others say about the characterE. How the character looks (physical description,

manner of dress)F. The narrator can make direct comments about

the character’s nature.

Page 8: AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION “It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014 Mr. Houghteling

_____ 6. Bear had been drinking, and his eyes were glossy, he walked unsteadily, grinning all the time as he continued around the counter. _____ 7. Her large, dark face showed all the pain she had gone through this day, this past weekend. No. The pain I saw in that face came from many years past. _____ 8. The whiskey burned him like fire—his chest, his belly, even his nostrils. _____ 9. I figured that’s where most of their money went, on those gold teeth, that perfume, and payment on the new white Cadillac that Joe had parked before the door. But they were good people, both of them. _____ 10. “And I teach what the white folks around here tell me to teach—reading, writing, and ‘rithmetic. They never told me how to keep a black boy out of a liquor store …Tante Lou, Miss Emma, Jefferson is dead. …He’s dead now. And I can’t raise the dead. All I can do is try to keep the others from ending up like this—but he’s gone from us.”

Page 9: AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION “It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014 Mr. Houghteling

F, E, A 6. Bear had been drinking, and his eyes were glossy, he walked unsteadily, grinning all the time as he continued around the counter. D 7. Her large, dark face showed all the pain she had gone through this day, this past weekend. No. The pain I saw in that face came from many years past. F 8. The whiskey burned him like fire—his chest, his belly, even his nostrils. D 9. I figured that’s where most of their money went, on those gold teeth, that perfume, and payment on the new white Cadillac that Joe had parked before the door. But they were good people, both of them. C 10. “And I teach what the white folks around here tell me to teach—reading, writing, and ‘rithmetic. They never told me how to keep a black boy out of a liquor store …Tante Lou, Miss Emma, Jefferson is dead. …He’s dead now. And I can’t raise the dead. All I can do is try to keep the others from ending up like this—but he’s gone from us.”

Page 10: AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION “It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014 Mr. Houghteling

Grant as teacher (33-41) Ch. 5

• What did we learn about Grant as teacher of the plantation children? (Characterization)• What do we learn about the

plantation society? (Setting)

Page 11: AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION “It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014 Mr. Houghteling

Waiting for Sam Guidry (42-50)

•What evidence can you cite about the tyranny of white oppression as demonstrated in Chapter 6?

Page 12: AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION “It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014 Mr. Houghteling

Dr. Joseph (51-58)

• Why does Ernest J. Gaines include the chapter of the superintendent of school visiting the plantation school? (Author’s purpose)• What comparison does Grant make

about Dr. Joseph’s treatment of the children? Cite your evidence. (historical background)

Page 13: AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION “It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014 Mr. Houghteling

The old men and Matthew Antoine (59-66)

• What is the “vicious circle” Grant describes? (62) (historical background)• Who is Matthew Antoine, and why is he

so important to Grant and, in extension, to our understanding of the novel? (Characterization)

Page 14: AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION “It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014 Mr. Houghteling

The first visit with Jefferson (67-74)

• How did you react to Gaines’s description of the visit between Miss Emma, Tante Lou, Grant, and Jefferson?

Page 15: AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION “It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014 Mr. Houghteling

HOMEWORK

• Read through page 124 (Chapter 16).

Page 16: AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION “It’s a Wretched Wednesday!” February 26, 2014 Mr. Houghteling

Jackie Robinson steals home…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6XY-XshGhMU