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Bellwork

Bellwork. Take one of each sheet from the table. We’ll discuss the sheets shortly. In your journal, define a hero. Hero Archetype.

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Bellwork

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  1. Bellwork • Take one of each sheet from the table. • We’ll discuss the sheets shortly. • In your journal, define a hero.

  2. Hero Archetype The Hero—This archetype is so well defined that the life of the protagonist can be clearly divided into a series of well-marked adventures that strongly suggest a ritualistic pattern. Traditionally, the hero’s mother is a virgin, the circumstances of this conception are unusual, and at birth some attempt is made to kill him. He is, however, spirited away and reared by foster parents. We know almost nothing of his childhood, but upon reaching manhood, he returns to his future kingdom. After a victory over the king or a wild beast, he marries a princess, becomes king, reigns uneventfully, but may later lose favor with the gods. He is then driven from the city after which he meets a mysterious death, often at the top of a hill. His body is not buried, but nevertheless, he has one of more holy sepulchers. Characters who exemplify this archetype to a greater or lesser extent are Oedipus, Theseus Romulus, Perseus, Jason, Dionysus, Joseph, Moses, Elijah, Jesus Christ, Siegfried, Arthur, Robin Hood, Beowulf, and Frodo.

  3. Hero Archetype The hero’s archetypal journey can be comprised of these stages: Ordinary world in the beginning Call to adventure Reluctance or refusal of the call Mentors Crossing the first threshold Test, enemies Allies Approaching the inmost cave Supreme ordeal Reward Road back Resurrection Return with the elixir

  4. Archetypes • Use what we just read about the hero archetype and “No Ordinary Joe” to answer the following question. • In Rick Reilly’s “No Ordinary Joe,” how does Joe Delaney demonstrate the qualities of the archetype hero? Answer in your journal in one sentence.

  5. Literary Analysis 2 (Fiction/Nonfiction) Write paragraph choosing one of the topics from the handout given at the beginning of class. Be sure to embed your textual evidence and then cite this with line numbers in parentheses. Review how to embed quotations from the website’s important handouts. Review the fix its list and consider vocabulary and sentence structure. Each final draft should be typed (double spaced, 12 pt. times or time new roman font) and color-coded according to the parts of a paragraph. (due Tuesday for academic achievement grade)

  6. Personal Narrative Focus on one particular event, aspect, or memory of your life and to tell the story behind it. Consider the rites of passage in your life—times when you were affected, challenged, or changed in some way because of an event. First or third person point of view 3-5 typed pages Will be reading to entire class. Do not choose a topic that is too sensitive for you to share with the class.

  7. Personal Narrative 9/9—Prewriting due 9/11—Draft #1 due and in-class peer editing on content 9/14—Draft #2 due and in-class group editing on language; continue to edit on your own to prepare final copy 9/15—Elements of Style quiz: sections II and III 9/16-21—Café Brady begins (Bring final copy of paper) 9/22—Final product due (staple these items in this order: final copy of paper, all drafts and prewriting; place in a pocket folder with the assignment rubric) You cannot use extend-a-bucks on editing activities!

  8. Element of Style Quiz 1 • Monday (Sept. 7) • Over section 1 Ideas to focus on: • Pronouns (proper use) • Possessives • Correct pronoun to go with the antecedent • Commas • Parenthetic expressions • Independent clauses • Proper use of a colon • Proper placement of participial phrase

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