Plots, Tones, and Genres! The fun stuff! August 16, 2011.

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Plots, Tones, and Genres! The fun stuff! August 16, 2011

Transcript of Plots, Tones, and Genres! The fun stuff! August 16, 2011.

Page 1: Plots, Tones, and Genres! The fun stuff! August 16, 2011.

Plots, Tones, and Genres! The fun stuff!

August 16, 2011

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What is a plot?

•Sequence of events that occur within a story.• It is a guide to help readers understand what is going on.

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Plot Diagram

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Exposition

• The beginning of the story that introduces the reader to the purpose.• It offers clues into regarding what will unfold.• Background Information

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Rising Action

•The events that lead up to the climax.•The conflicts or struggles of the protagonist.

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Climax

• The highest point of the story.• The conflict comes to the point of intensity and drama.• The turning point of the story.

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Falling Action

• Sequence of events that lead to the resolution. • The protagonist is trying to resolve the matter, while still enduring friction with the antagonist.

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Resolution

•The end of the story where the protagonist finds peace. •Everything is solved.

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BELL RINGER

•Head your paper•What is a genre?

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Time is Up!

•Pass your papers to the front•Pass them to the left to Whitlock

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Watch your tone!

• Tone: the writer's attitude toward the material and/or readers. Tone may be playful, formal, intimate, angry, serious, ironic, outraged, baffled, tender, serene, depressed, etc.

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What is a Genre?

•Category of artistic works that are based on form, style, or subject matter.

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Different forms of Genre in Fiction

• Drama• Fable• Fairy Tale• Fiction• Folklore• Poetry

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Different forms of Genre in Nonfiction

•Autobiography/Biography•Essays•Nonfiction•Speech

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What is a drama?

• Stories that are composed for performances through expressions and dialogue.

• William Shakespeare “Romeo & Juliet”

• http://youtu.be/R6zKB6_mo_M• “Dreamgirls”• http://youtube/HFrCsPAi4zw

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Fable

• Narration through a third person limited or omniscient character.• They are usually through

animals that the story is told.• Aesop’s Fable–“The Lion and The Mouse”–http://youtube/SXYW0blGk4w

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Fairy Tale

• Stories that are about creatures and may have a moral at the end.• Normally begin with “Once

upon a time…”• Happy endings• Cookie cutter stories

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Fiction• Narrative works that are produced from the imagination.• “The Skin I’m In” –Sharon G. Flake• “Joy Luck Club”-Amy Tan• “The Lottery” Sharon Jackson

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Bell Ringer

•What is the difference between plot and summary?

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Essays

• A short or long literary composition that reflects the author's outlook or point.

• Expository- Explanation of a topic• Persuasive- Getting your audience to

see your point of view.• Demonstrative-Being able to

demonstrate something that you know.

• Narrative-Telling a story

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Folklore

•Definition: Stories, songs, and myths that are passed down and may be false.• As the story continues throughout generations, it may become altered.

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Poetry

• Creative rhyming that does or does not have to have a rhyme. • Using imagery• Maya Angelou“Still I Rise”• Langston Hughes “A Dream Deferred”

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Nonfiction

• A written piece of information that is accurate and true. •Must have facts and theories

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Speech

• Public address of messages. • Appropriate audience targeted• Valid Research Messages•Debates•Obama’s Inaugural Speech

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Picture ID

• Identify the media and give me the literary device used.

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Media #1

• http://youtu.be/VjnygQ02aW4

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Media #2

• http://youtu.be/tNCzXilo9SQ

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Media #3

• http://youtu.be/1q91RZko5Gw

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Media # 4

• http://youtu.be/gOPqth0C3ss

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Media #5

• http://youtu.be/cOy8XmA9hBc

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Bell Ringer

• Please write in your journal about something that happened to you that was a traumatic or exciting experience.

• If you don’t have your journal, please write it on a piece of paper and insert it in your journal tomorrow.

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Time is Up!!!

• Pass it to the left to Whitlock! • Please be quiet and get out your notebooks! • Label your notes: Figurative Language!

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Simile

• What is a simile?• Simile is a comparison that uses “like” or “as”

to describe someone or something. • “Pretty as a picture”-Keri Hilson• You look like an angel from heaven.

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Metaphor

• The metaphor states a fact or draws a verbal picture by the use of comparison.

• You are what you eat.• Life is a struggle.

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Imagery

• The usage of the five senses that the author uses for the reader to connect with the work.

• Taste• See• Smell• Hear• Touch

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Personification

• A figure of speech in which human characteristics are given to an animal or an object.

• My teddy bear held my hand in the mall.