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UNIT 1 ; THE WORLD OF A STORY

Presented by: MS 3 YeJi Seo SeonJae Yang Suyoung Han JiHye Han. UNIT 1 ; THE WORLD OF A STORY. Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 Unit 4 Unit 5 Unit 6 Unit 7 Unit 8 Unit 9 Unit 10 Unit 11 Unit 12. LITERARY ELEMENTS. 사진. A WORLD OF IDEAS. THE AUTHOR’S CRAFT. WORLD CLASSICS.

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UNIT 1 ; THE WORLD OF A STORY

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  1. Presented by: MS 3 YeJi Seo SeonJae Yang Suyoung Han JiHye Han UNIT 1 ; THE WORLD OF A STORY

  2. Unit 1 • Unit 2 • Unit 3 • Unit 4 • Unit 5 • Unit 6 • Unit 7 • Unit 8 • Unit 9 • Unit 10 • Unit 11 • Unit 12 LITERARY ELEMENTS 사진 A WORLD OF IDEAS THE AUTHOR’S CRAFT WORLD CLASSICS

  3. *THE ORDER* FICTION (한수영) POETRY (양선재) NON-FICTION (한지혜) MEDIA (서예지) “THE WORLD OF STORY”

  4. Literary Analysis: Plot, Setting, and Mood

  5. Part 1: Setting and Mood

  6. Part 2: Plot and Story Analysis Plot) a chain of events that traces a conflict Conflict) a struggle between opposing forces – internal & external Internal) taking place within the mind of a character External) conflict between a character and an outside force

  7. Stages of a Typical Plot Turning point CLIMAX FALLING ACTION RISING ACTION Results of the decision Thickening the plot RESOLUTION Final outcome EXPOSITION Introduction

  8. Part 3: Analyze the Literature Fiction Non-Fiction Media Poetry

  9. FICTION

  10. Harrison Bergeron -Characters

  11. Every Day use -Characters

  12. To Build a Fire -Characters

  13. NONFICTION 1)The Johnstown Flood 2) The Race to Save Apollo13

  14. Is SURVIVAL a matter of chance?

  15. *Historical Narrative* • = a story told about real events that occurred in the past •  focus on the event, the atmosphere/mood when that incident took place & how the author illustrated the details of the setting

  16. *The Johnstown Flood* • When? 1889 • Where? Johnstown, Pennsylvania • Death Toll? 2,209 (2,209 > 9/11 attacks) • After the flood? clean-up operations for years • Why so significant? Following floods (1894, 1907, and 1924) • Blame? South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club

  17. *Character* • James Quinn; Father • Aunt Abbie • Gertrude; Daughter • Maxwell McArchen; the guy who saved Gertrude • Metz; family who helped Gertrude

  18. *Plot/Storyline* • “James, you are too anxious. This big house could never go” <-Aunt Abbie • Flood! • Everybody to the hill • Aunt Abbie; “I don’t like to put my feet in that dirty water” => go back home • Gertrude; “I want to be with my dad.” • House sinks… • Crawls out a hole • On the mattress • 20 Men on the roof; Among them, Maxwell McArchen • Hands Gertrude over to the rescue operation team • Finally, the Metz picked her up

  19. *Plot/Storyline* • “James, you are too anxious. This big house could never go” <-Aunt Abbie • Flood! • Everybody to the hill • Aunt Abbie; “I don’t like to put my feet in that dirty water” => go back home • Gertrude; “I want to be with my dad.” • House sinks… • Crawls out a hole • On the mattress • 20 Men on the roof; Among them, Maxwell McArchen • Hands Gertrude over to the rescue operation team • Finally, the Metz picked her up

  20. *Plot/Storyline* • “James, you are too anxious. This big house could never go” <-Aunt Abbie • Flood! • Everybody to the hill • Aunt Abbie; “I don’t like to put my feet in that dirty water” => go back home • Gertrude; “I want to be with my dad.” • House sinks… • Crawls out a hole • On the mattress • 20 Men on the roof; Among them, Maxwell McArchen • Hands Gertrude over to the rescue operation team • Finally, the Metz picked her up

  21. *Plot/Storyline* • “James, you are too anxious. This big house could never go” <-Aunt Abbie • Flood! • Everybody to the hill • Aunt Abbie; “I don’t like to put my feet in that dirty water” => go back home • Gertrude; “I want to be with my dad.” • House sinks… • Crawls out a hole • On the mattress • 20 Men on the roof; Among them, Maxwell McArchen • Hands Gertrude over to the rescue operation team • Finally, the Metz picked her up

  22. *Plot/Storyline* • “James, you are too anxious. This big house could never go” <-Aunt Abbie • Flood! • Everybody to the hill • Aunt Abbie; “I don’t like to put my feet in that dirty water” => go back home • Gertrude; “I want to be with my dad.” • House sinks… • Crawls out a hole • On the mattress • 20 Men on the roof; Among them, Maxwell McArchen • Hands Gertrude over to the rescue operation team • Finally, the Metz picked her up

  23. *Plot/Storyline* • “James, you are too anxious. This big house could never go” <-Aunt Abbie • Flood! • Everybody to the hill • Aunt Abbie; “I don’t like to put my feet in that dirty water” => go back home • Gertrude; “I want to be with my dad.” • House sinks… • Crawls out a hole • On the mattress • 20 Men on the roof; Among them, Maxwell McArchen • Hands Gertrude over to the rescue operation team • Finally, the Metz picked her up

  24. *Plot/Storyline* • “James, you are too anxious. This big house could never go” <-Aunt Abbie • Flood! • Everybody to the hill • Aunt Abbie; “I don’t like to put my feet in that dirty water” => go back home • Gertrude; “I want to be with my dad.” • House sinks… • Crawls out a hole • On the mattress • 20 Men on the roof; Among them, Maxwell McArchen • Hands Gertrude over to the rescue operation team • Finally, the Metz picked her up

  25. *Plot/Storyline* • “James, you are too anxious. This big house could never go” <-Aunt Abbie • Flood! • Everybody to the hill • Aunt Abbie; “I don’t like to put my feet in that dirty water” => go back home • Gertrude; “I want to be with my dad.” • House sinks… • Crawls out a hole • On the mattress • 20 Men on the roof; Among them, Maxwell McArchen • Hands Gertrude over to the rescue operation team • Finally, the Metz picked her up

  26. *Plot/Storyline* • “James, you are too anxious. This big house could never go” <-Aunt Abbie • Flood! • Everybody to the hill • Aunt Abbie; “I don’t like to put my feet in that dirty water” => go back home • Gertrude; “I want to be with my dad.” • House sinks… • Crawls out a hole • On the mattress • 20 Men on the roof; Among them, Maxwell McArchen • Hands Gertrude over to the rescue operation team • Finally, the Metz picked her up

  27. *Plot/Storyline* • “James, you are too anxious. This big house could never go” <-Aunt Abbie • Flood! • Everybody to the hill • Aunt Abbie; “I don’t like to put my feet in that dirty water” => go back home • Gertrude; “I want to be with my dad.” • House sinks… • Crawls out a hole • On the mattress • 20 Men on the roof; Among them, Maxwell McArchen • Hands Gertrude over to the rescue operation team • Finally, the Metz picked her up

  28. *Plot/Storyline* • “James, you are too anxious. This big house could never go” <-Aunt Abbie • Flood! • Everybody to the hill • Aunt Abbie; “I don’t like to put my feet in that dirty water” => go back home • Gertrude; “I want to be with my dad.” • House sinks… • Crawls out a hole • On the mattress • 20 Men on the roof; Among them, Maxwell McArchen • Hands Gertrude over to the rescue operation team • Finally, the Metz picked her up

  29. Is SURVIVAL a matter of chance?

  30. YES! ♣

  31. MEDIA • Media

  32. POETRY What makes you feel like an OUTSIDER?

  33. Narrative Poetry A narrative poem is a poem that tells a story. Short Story Narrative Poetry Characters, setting, and a plot driven by conflict

  34. Reading Strategy • Read a poem slowly, notice how lines are grouped in stanzas • Try to interpret figurative language • Identify the speaker of a poem

  35. Exileby Julia Alvarez

  36. Exile • 'Exile' is a narrative poem about the a woman and her father as they suddenly depart from the Dominican. • The poem describes the loss that is felt upon departure from their home.

  37. Exile About the author Julia Alvarez is a Dominican-American poet, novelist, and essayist. Born in New York of Dominican descent, she spent the first ten years of her childhood in the Dominican Republic, until her father's involvement in a political rebellion forced her family to flee the country. (wikipedia)

  38. Exile

  39. Crossing the Borderby Joy Harjo

  40. Crossing the Border • ‘Crossing the Border' is a narrative poem about discrimination towards African-Americans.

  41. Crossing the Border About the author Joy Harjois a Native American poet, musician, and author. She is often cited as playing a formidable role in the second wave of what critic Kenneth Lincoln has coined the Native American Renaissance. (wikipedia)

  42. Crossing the Border

  43. Alienation • Both poems express alienation • “Exile”: an outsider in a new country • “Crossing the Border”: an outsider in her own country • Both speakers express alienation through their silence.

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