Setting and Mood
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Transcript of Setting and Mood
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Setting and Mood
• Setting: time and place of the story
• Writers create setting through:– Details that suggest time of day, year,
season, historical period– Descriptions of characters, clothing,
buildings, weather, and landscapes
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Setting and Mood
• Mood: feeling or atmosphere writer creates for readers– Developed through use of imagery, word
choice, and details
• Setting details can help establish a mood
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Setting and Mood
• In some stories, setting is crucial to meaning• Let’s brainstorm a list of stories or films in which
setting is very important:• For example: Titanic, Hunger Games
SettingStory Title The Setting Effect on Story
Element
Star Wars
Sponge bob
The future in space
Under the sea
The whole story is about wars in space
He is a sponge
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Setting and Mood
• Now take that same chart and list the mood.
Setting MoodStory Title The Setting Effect on Story
ElementWhat created the mood
Effect on Story
Sponge bob Under the sea about a sponge
The characters, under the ocean
Happy, goofy
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Now turn to page 29
• Ethan Frome
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Plot
• The elements of a story (series of scenes)
• What happens• Conflict: struggle b/t opposing forces• Internal: Taking place within the mind of
a character• External: Taking place between a
character and an outside source (another charcter, society, nature, etc.)
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5 Stages of Plot
1. Exposition: Intro. of setting, characters, mood
2. Rising action: Conflict established, characters respond
3. Climax: Turning point, decision is made
4. Falling action: Shows results of decision
5. Resolution: final outcome
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Think, Pair, Share…
• Your first crush…– Who was it (come up with a fake name if
you need to)?– When was it?– How did you act around them?– Does love make you do crazy things?
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“The Bass, The River and Sheila Mant”
By W.D. Wetherell
Turn to page 31
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Conflict: a struggle between two opposing forcesThere are two kinds:
• internal man vs. himself—the struggle takes
place in the character’s mind or heart
• external man vs. an outside force—the struggle is
against another man, nature, the environment, the supernatural, society
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Allusion:
a brief reference to a well-known person, event, or place (real or fictitious) or to a work of art.
• Allusions are drawn from history, geography, literature, or religion.
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Allusion: In this short story, there are allusions to two historical figures:
• Jackie Onassis
• Ann-Margret
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Jackie Kennedy Onassis
Wife of JFK; famous first lady noted for her fashion sense & the pillbox hat; married Greek millionaire after assassination of JFK; led life of wealthy recluse.
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From President’s Widow to Millionaire’s Wife
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Ann-MargretA popular actress in the ’60s
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1960’s Version of Megan Fox
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Background Info: When the narrator mentions the Dartmouth Heavyweight Crew, he is talking about sculling.
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Vocabulary to Understand:Denizens—inhabitantsPensive—dreamily thoughtfulDubious—doubtfulAntipathy—strong dislikeFilial—pertaining to a son or daughterSurreptitiously—sneakilyConspicuous—obvious or very easy to seeConcussion—powerful shock or impactLuminous—glowing or giving off lightQuizzical—puzzled or questioning
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Agree or Disagree?
• Teenage boys often fall for older girls.
• Teenagers often do silly things for love.
• Boys are more self-centered than girls.
• Bad decisions often “haunt” the decision maker.
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Plot, Setting, Mood
• Identify Plot, Setting, and Mood using LAWS (Literary Analysis Worksheet)