1 / 18

The Person on the Page Using Their Lives Writing from Experience Writing from Imagination Practice

Literary Criticism: Does Fiction Reflect the Writer’s Life?. Feature Menu. The Person on the Page Using Their Lives Writing from Experience Writing from Imagination Practice. The Person on the Page. One day your friend tells you about a book he just finished reading.

yates
Download Presentation

The Person on the Page Using Their Lives Writing from Experience Writing from Imagination Practice

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Literary Criticism: Does Fiction Reflect the Writer’s Life? Feature Menu The Person on the Page Using Their Lives Writing from Experience Writing from Imagination Practice

  2. The Person on the Page One day your friend tells you about a book he just finished reading. This guy went fishing with his younger cousin, and they ended up getting attacked by a bear. The guy got away and made it back to the road, but his cousin didn’t. He just left his cousin out there in the woods, can you believe that?

  3. The Person on the Page Then your friend makes a common—but often false—assumption about the story’s author . . . Man, if I did something like that, I sure wouldn’t write about it for the whole world to read. I’d feel too bad about it—kind of like a coward, you know? What has your friend assumed about the author?

  4. The Person on the Page Is the narrator the same as the person writing the book? Sometimes the answer is yes. Some authors write about themselves. Sometimes the answer is no. The character and the author are not alike. [End of Section]

  5. Using Their Lives Writers often use parts of their real lives—people, places, situations, and things—as parts of made-up stories. The writer of a story about a girl who learns to fly might set the story in his own neighborhood. A writer might base the personality of a Wild West sheriff on her uncle.

  6. However, his own adventures training sled dogs made their way into his novel Dogsong. Using Their Lives Gary Paulsen was never stranded alone in the wilderness like the hero of his book Hatchet.

  7. Using Their Lives It can be interesting to connect what we know about a writer’s life with his or her work. Why does one writer make all her teenage characters outsiders and rebels? Why does another seem especially interested in the judicial system? Only the writer can answer these questions for sure. [End of Section]

  8. Writing from Experience At one time almost all the books published in America were written by people of European descent. Mark Twain Dorothy M. Johnson Edgar Allan Poe

  9. Writing from Experience Now you can read about the experiences of Americans from all backgrounds in books written by people from those backgrounds. Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve Christopher Paul Curtis Amy Tan

  10. Writing from Experience In their stories, you can read about the lives of Native Americans, African Americans, and Chinese Americans. [End of Section]

  11. Writing from Imagination Although experience is an important part of an author’s writing, imagination is also crucial.

  12. Can a grown woman write from the point of view of a little boy? Writing from Imagination Can a person who spent her whole life far from the sea write about the ocean? What do you think?

  13. Writing from Imagination Many writers have written brilliant, convincing books about things they have never experienced. fantasy science fiction In fact, some types of fiction always require the writer to think beyond his or her experience. [End of Section]

  14. Let’s Try It Practice A Smart Cookie Sandra Cisneros I could’ve been somebody, you know? my mother says and sighs. She has lived in this city her whole life. She can speak two languages. She can sing an opera. She knows how to fix a TV. But she doesn’t know which subway train to take to get downtown. I hold her hand very tight while we wait for the right train to arrive. She used to draw when she had time. Now she draws with a needle and thread, little knotted rosebuds, tulips made of silk thread. 1. Is the main character the writer’s mother? 2. Who is the story’s narrator?

  15. Let’s Try It Practice Someday she would like to go to the ballet. Someday she would like to see a play. She borrows opera records from the public library and sings with velvety lungs powerful as morning glories. Today while cooking oatmeal she is Madame Butterfly until she sighs and points the wooden spoon at me. I could’ve been somebody, you know? Esperanza, you go to school. Study hard. That Madame Butterfly was a fool. She stirs the oatmeal. Look at my comadres [friends]. She means Izaura whose husband left and Yolanda whose husband is dead. Got to take care all your own, she says shaking her head. 3. Do you think the mother’s feelings about her life are felt only by Mexican American women?

  16. Let’s Try It Practice Then out of nowhere: Shame is a bad thing, you know. It keeps you down. You want to know why I quit school? Because I didn’t have nice clothes. No clothes, but I had brains. Yup, she says disgusted, stirring again. I was a smart cookie then. 4. What universal human experience is addressed on this page?

  17. Practice On Your Own In your reading you have almost certainly found a special writer whose stories you love. As the school year goes on, keep records of your favorite reading experiences on notecards like the one to the right. You can find answers to the last three items by reading about the writer’s life. [End of Section]

  18. Literary Criticism: Does Fiction Reflect the Writer’s Life? The End

More Related