Tuesday, October 27, 2015
Week 4 Homework
"Emelia is the real hero of Othello". To what extent do you agree with this statement? If this were an essay topic, write an introductory paragraph which presents your thesis and at least two main points in support of this. This is to be posted on your blog by 8.20 Monday.
Monday, October 19, 2015
Week 3 Homework 2
Why does Othello react so quickly and so strongly to Iago's manipulation? Does the problem lie within Othello? Is Iago just too good at what he does or is it a combination of the two? Argue your case and justify your point of view in a well-structured and detailed paragraph. Refer to at least one theme and evaluate one positioning technique. Incorporate a quotation and make sure it is referenced correctly. Post to your blog (or email to me) by 8.20 Monday morning.
Week 3 Homework 1
The character, Othello, is missing from much of the early part of the play. We hear about him and what he has done from discussions among/between other characters - Iago and Roderigo; Brabantio, Iago and Roderigo; Brabantio and the Senator). When he is discussed or referred to, it is using language that we would consider quite racist in modern terms. For example, he is variously referred to as; “the Moor” (1.1.57), “the thick-lips” (1.1.66), “an old black ram” (1.1.88), and “a Barbary horse” (1.1.113). Although Othello appears at the beginning of the second scene, we do not hear his name until well into Act 1, Scene 3 (1.3.48). Why has Shakespeare chosen to introduce the main character in this way? How is the audience being positioned to see Othello and to see other characters? Write a well-structured paragraph in response, using evidence from the play, including at least one quotation and evaluating the use of aesthetic features. Post to your blog (or email to me) by 8.20 Friday morning.
Sunday, August 23, 2015
Week 7 and 8 Writing practice.
How important a character is Mr Collins?
Write a paragraph in response, clearly arguing your point of view. In developing your thesis, include a discussion of the way the reader is positioned to respond to him and the importance of this for dealing with the ideas about class which underpin the novel. Consider the work we have done in class on satire and irony.
Write a paragraph in response, clearly arguing your point of view. In developing your thesis, include a discussion of the way the reader is positioned to respond to him and the importance of this for dealing with the ideas about class which underpin the novel. Consider the work we have done in class on satire and irony.
Week 7 Writing practice
Pride and Prejudice Paragraph Writing
For homework – write a well-structured paragraph response to the
following:
"Elizabeth Bennet is a character to whom today's young women can relate very easily because she refuses to meet society’s expectations with regard to both gender and class."
REMEMBER THE TEC STRUCTURE
"Elizabeth Bennet is a character to whom today's young women can relate very easily because she refuses to meet society’s expectations with regard to both gender and class."
Complete by Wednesday and post to your blog or email to me.
TOPIC SENTENCE
This outlines what you are talking about and may
restate the question in your own words, explaining your point of view of the
topic.
ELABORATION AND
EVIDENCE AND EVALUATION
Here you expand or elaborate on your topic. You might
make several points about the same topic. With each point you make you
should use direct quotations with references from your text/novel to support
your discussion. Ensure you evaluate or synthesise your points, don’t just
reword the quotation.
CONCLUDING/CLINCHING
SENTENCE
Finally your paragraph must have a concluding sentence
that sums up your discussion relating directly to your point of view on the
question.Tuesday, August 4, 2015
Persuasive devices
Persuasive
techniques
In your script
|
In your delivery
|
·
Rhetorical questions
·
Language choices
·
Quotations
·
Emotive language (language to appeal to our
emotions)
·
Colloquial language to connect with the
audience
·
Use of personal pronouns (you and we)
·
Appeal to other senses (power point)
·
Appeal to reason and ability to think
·
Statistics
·
Underline words for emphasis
·
Hyperbole
·
Anecdotes
·
Quotations
·
Concrete evidence to support your connections
|
·
Sound confident
·
Hand gestures
·
Projecting your voice
·
Eye contact
·
Emphasis on particular words
·
Speed (slow down!)
·
Expression
·
Using your power point refer to it!
·
Pause
·
Body language
·
Facial expression
·
Sound like you want to persuade the audience
PPT ideas
·
Copy of your poem
·
Images relating to your discussion
·
Bullet points reinforcing key points of your
discussion
·
Quotes – singled out or highlighted in the
poem
·
Sections of the poem with annotations on the
screen
·
Evidence of connection between the poems
ideas, values and attitudes and 21st century material
·
Headings
·
Summary points
·
Table – use of 2 columns showing poem ideas
and 21st century connections
·
Mind map
·
Stats or facts
|
Wednesday, July 22, 2015
This is an example of how you might approach the task for the poem Ozymandias - which you may not do!
Practice
notes
Ozymandias
By Percy
Bysshe Shelley
I met a
traveller from an antique land
Who said:
`Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in
the desert. Near them, on the sand,
Half
sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And
wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,
Tell that
its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet
survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand
that mocked them and the heart that fed.
And on
the pedestal these words appear --
"My
name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on
my works, ye Mighty, and despair!"
Nothing
beside remains. Round the decay
Of that
colossal wreck, boundless and bare
The lone
and level sands stretch far away.'
Introduction:
Persuasive device – Perhaps a 10 second clip or still photo from the scenes
of the appointment of the
new North Korean leader? Rhetorical question – “When we look at the world
around us, isn’t an examination of the way human beings exercise power still
something that we can, and perhaps should, engage in?"
Thesis:
In his poem, Ozymandias, Percy
Shelley certainly presents an idea which has relevance for the global citizens
of the 21st century. In just
14 lines Shelley captures the essence of a particularly prominent human
characteristic – the tendency to allow power and status to go to one’s head.
The poem positions readers to understand that such pride in one's power and
belief in its longevity is a delusion.
Who will connect with this: Almost anybody alive could
be expected to connect with this idea. In the 21st century we see examples
every day in the media of people who seem to have exactly Ozymansias' view of
themselves. (List some examples). Those interested in politics and the history
of politics might be especially interested. The poem could almost be read as a
warning to those in positions of power or who desire power that it is more ephemeral
than we think and our view of ourselves may not be shared by others.
Body:
The poem is a sonnet and the first
section presents readers with an interesting scenario but not one in which the
idea is clearly relevant to those of us living in the modern world. We need to
read through to the end of the poem before this relevance becomes completely
apparent. Shelley does immediately engage our
attention though through the use of the first person pronoun as he begins to
tell his story – “I met a..”. We immediately feel as if we are involved in a
chain of storytelling. It’s a little like hearing the story of a friend’s
adventure from a third party. So, in fact, it is “the traveller” who is
speaking to us, not the poet. To the 21st century reader who is
perhaps a little wary of poetry as a medium, this might in fact help to
overcome some of our natural suspicion.
We are also immediately taken to
the “antique land” where the events have taken place and the traveller begins a
description of what he or she saw. Although we are not yet sure that we can
connect with the ideas, we know we can connect with the imagery used to present
this scene to us. We have a sense of having been transported to some desolate
area in the Middle East, Egypt or Saudi Arabia or some exotic place where these
two “vast and trunkless legs stand in the desert”. Perhaps the 21st
century reader, with the advantage of memories of having seen the sphinx and
the pyramids at least on television or at the movies, if not in real life, is
in a better position to relate to this than Shelley’s 19th century
reader. Even without this, the language used
creates a vivid picture – the “trunkless legs ” and the “shattered
visage” can be imagined because of the power of the language choices to create
a visual image for the reader.
Thursday, May 14, 2015
Week 4 Task 3
Write a paragraph in which you compare the attitudes of Johnnie and Bubba to the lives of the main characters, especially the lay-off.
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
Week 4 Task 2
Write a paragraph comparing Barnie's and Roo's attitudes to the current lay off.
To help you get started think about the following:
How do they each perceive the experience of this 17th lay off season?
How do we know this? Identify some evidence from the play.
What do you think is the reason behind each character's attitude?
To help you get started think about the following:
How do they each perceive the experience of this 17th lay off season?
How do we know this? Identify some evidence from the play.
What do you think is the reason behind each character's attitude?
Monday, May 11, 2015
Week 4 - Task 1
Thursday, March 12, 2015
Week 8 homework
Intervene in the narrative by telling the story of the walk to the tram stop which occurs on pages 43 and 44 from Johnno's point of view. Write in first person, articulating to the reader Johnno's thoughts and feelings about Dante, the visit and his reaction to what Dante did.
You should also begin to practise the deliberate use of language features that will make your writing more effective - see the editing checklist.
Vo cabulary – try to use the most effective word – look at verbs particularly.
H ave you tried to use examples of figurative language or imagery?
Remember that this is a narrative, so you should also narrate actions and include some dialogue.
You should begin by re-reading pages 43 and 44 to establish what the text contributes to our understanding of this situation.
Editing checklist
1 Sentence length –varied length or deliberately chosen length.
2 Sentence openings –varied openings.
3 Punctuation – used correctly?
4 Have you tried to use something other than commas and full stops?
Wednesday, March 11, 2015
Practice intervention.
Narrative Intervention Writing
Activity
A narrative
intervention is where you as the writing fill a gap in the story or give a
voice to a character or group that is silenced. In most narratives you are only
hearing the perspective of one character or the omniscient narrator. The
intervention asks you to choose a point or situation and develop it from an
alternate perspective. You are telling their version of events.
A famous example of this is the story, Wicked,
by Gregory Maguire, which takes the original tale of The Wizard of Oz
and tells it from the perspective of The Wicked Witch of the West, Elphaba.
Gaps - Gaps are places in the text where
readers are invited to make connections by drawing on their “common sense”
understanding of the world.
Silences - Silences result from
textual gaps that enable readers to avoid questioning certain cultural values.
I.e. your four-wheeled car has a reputation for breaking down – yet the
salesperson does not tell you this.
Values - Values are ideas to which people
attach importance, and on which they may base their actions.
ACTIVITY
Dante (the
narrator) has a very clearly defined set of attitudes and values as a child.
Re- read pages 37 – 39. What do you think Johnno thought about Dante during the
early years of their acquaintance in Scarborough? From Johnno’s point of view, write a description of Dante. You should
make Johnno’s attitudes and values clear in the process.
·
Dante describes himself at
13 as “a neat, darkly serious, well-brought-up little figure with a straight
tie knotted in the conventional manner…someone who is too well pleased with
himself to be true. I wasn’t true of course” (p38-39).
·
He speaks in this passage
of his first step into adulthood as he realises many of the things he was told
about life are in fact untrue.
Before you start writing, follow the scaffold
diagram to help you write from the perspective of Johnno for this task. You may have already noted some of these things from our discussion so just remind yourself.
Look for textual
examples of:
Dante’s rituals:
Read the text and
answer the following:
Why does Dante do
these things?
What is discipline
to Dante?
Why is discipline
important for young people?
Why does Dante
begin to doubt the value of discipline?
What is Johnno’s
view?
Monday, March 9, 2015
Tuesday's lesson
Write a description of a lesson in which Johnno is thrown out class from Soapie's point of view. Re-read the beginning of Chapter 1 and try to let the reader see Soapie's character and his understanding of Johnno through your narration. Post to your blog before the end of the lesson. If you have time, continue reading.
Thursday, February 26, 2015
Who is David Malouf?
One approach to reading a text is to explore the relationship between it and the author. Read the documents on Blackboard, or do your own research, and make notes under the following headings about David Malouf:
Full name:
Date of Birth:
Place of Birth:
Where lived throughout his life:
Family background:
Books published (list as many as you can):
Awards received:
What are his passions:
What does he say about why he wrote 'Johnno':
Anything interesting:
Tuesday, February 3, 2015
Week 2 Homework
In class, we have discussed the painting, "The Pioneers" by Frederick McCubbin and its representation of Australia . While some aspects of the representation are clear, others are debatable. Write a response to the painting in your choice of genre constructing a clear representation of Australia or Australians through your choice of aesthetic feaures to position the reader. You might choose to write as the woman in the first section of the painting or as the man in the last section. You might choose to describe the scene as Kathleen Noonan does in her feature article, "Be a Proud Aussie Quietly." Start by knowing what you want to say about Australia and/or Australians and choose your genre, voice and aesthetice features to achieve this. Post to your blog by Friday's lesson.
Sunday, February 1, 2015
Notes on positioning techniques
As we progress through this unit, you will be analyzing various texts to identify the way Australia is represented. The questions you need to ask yourself are:
The positioning techniques will be different for different kinds of texts. They will include the following:
Movies: camera angles, camera shots, lighting, costuming, characterisation, dialogue, setting, sound effects, music, structure, filming devices such as slow motion, fast forward etc
Short stories: structure, characterisation, point of view, symbols/motifs, language choices, setting, satire, irony
Poetry: simile, metaphor, alliteration, imagery, assonance, personification, repetition, rhyme, rhythm.
Articles: headline, by-line, visuals, language choices, structure, who is quoted and what they say
Week 2 Monday's homework
Read the article, “Be a Proud Aussie Quietly” which is in the folder "How the Australian journey is represented in texts" - "Activities and questions on non-fiction texts" on Blackboard. Identify one positioning technique and be able to explain what the technique is and how the reader is positioned by it. For example, you might find that there is a silence in the text or that one idea is privileged over others, as we discussed in class. You might also find an example of a positioning technique that you are familar with from last year, such as a particular language choice, the use of repetition etc. Remember that we are positioned by pictures as well as words. Be ready to speak to the class about what you have found tomorrow during the lesson.
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