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Midterm Review

Midterm Review. One essay the week before and 100 or so T.F., M.C., and matching. This document does not include answers; those are in your notes and workbook. Works that you better know really well:

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Midterm Review

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  1. Midterm Review One essay the week before and 100 or so T.F., M.C., and matching This document does not include answers; those are in your notes and workbook.

  2. Works that you better know really well: • These are not the only works that you will see on the test but they are the ones that your will need to know the best (that you should go back and study); there will be passages from other texts on the test, and you will answer reading-comprehension questions about those. • Coyote and Buffalo • World on a Turtle’s Back • Upon the Burning of My House • Sinner in the Hands of an Angry God • The Declaration of Independence—only worry about the first section, up to the list of grievances. • Psalm of Life • The Tide Rises, the Tide Falls • Civil Disobedience (Resistance to Civil Government) • Walden • Self Reliance • “Song of Myself” and “I Hear America Singing” • The Learned Astronomer • Dickinson’s poems

  3. You should be able to name the works of, and know basic facts about, the following writers: • Ann Bradstreet • Jonathon Edwards • Patrick Henry • Ben Franklin • Thomas Jefferson • Walt Whitman • Emily Dickinson • Henry David Thoreau • Ralph Waldo Emerson • Edgar Allan Poe • Nathaniel Hawthorne

  4. Know who belongs to each literary period, what time each spanned, and what each was about: • Native American • Explorers/European Invasion • Puritan and Great Awakening • Revolutionary/Age of Reason • Romanticism (see that picture sheet) • Transcendentalism (see that picture sheet)—don’t forget Margaret Fuller. • Gothic (see that picture sheet)

  5. Terms and other basic stuff that you should know: • Ethical, logical, and emotional appeals • Oral tradition • Recluse of Amherst • Transparent eyeball • Optimism/pessimism • Cause/effect • Primary/secondary • Objective/subjective • Intuition vs. logic • Creation myth • Folk tale • Trickster tale • Sermon • Journal

  6. Terms and other basic stuff that you should know: • Autobiography • Narrative (personal and slave) • Aphorism • Fiction/nonfiction • Meter • Stanza • Rhyme scheme • Couplet • Iambic pentameter • Slant Rhyme • Speech • Sermon • Allusion

  7. Terms and other basic stuff that you should know: • Irony • Metaphor • Simile • Juxtaposition • Paradox • Hyperbole • Understatement • Premise • Rhetorical question • Parallelism • Repetition • Paraphrase • Onomatopoeia • Imagery • Theme • Tone

  8. The Crucible: the big themes, the big symbols, the big ideas, the big conflicts (no small details)

  9. Study Hard.Keep the exam in perspective.Do your best.Exhale.Problem Solve.Be happy.

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