Dead Poet Society

1 / 54
next
Slide 1: Slide
EngelsWOStudiejaar 4

This lesson contains 54 slides, with text slides and 5 videos.

time-iconLesson duration is: 120 min

Items in this lesson

Slide 1 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Slide 2 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Slide 3 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Slide 4 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Slide 5 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Slide 6 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Slide 7 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Slide 8 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Slide 9 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Slide 10 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Slide 11 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Romanticism and Transcendentalism 
Ralph Waldo Emerson  

Henry David Thoreau   

             Jean-Jacques Rousseau           
Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains. Here’s one who thinks he is the master of others, yet he is more enslaved than they are. (Rousseau, 1762, Social Contract)

Transcendentalism is a philosophical movement that developed in the late 1820s and 1830s in New England. A core belief is in the inherent goodness of people and nature,and while society and its institutions have corrupted the purity of the individual, people are at their best when truly "self-reliant" and independent. Transcendentalists saw divine experience inherent in the everyday, rather than believing in a distant heaven. Transcendentalism emphasizes subjective intuition over objective empiricism

Slide 12 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Motif
A motif is a repeated pattern—an image, sound, word, or symbol that comes back again and again within a particular story; an idea that appears repeatedly in the work of an artist or in a piece of writing or music.

Slide 13 - Slide

This item has no instructions

0 - 24 min

Slide 14 - Slide

This item has no instructions

0 - 24 min

Slide 15 - Slide

This item has no instructions

0 - 24 min
to have to meet high expectations about something that came before

Slide 16 - Slide

What is the meaning of "have big shoes to fill"?
The meaning of "have big shoes to fill" is:
to have to meet high expectations about something that came before
Our new teacher has big shoes to fill, because our old teacher was so great!

0 - 24 min

Slide 17 - Slide

This item has no instructions

O Captain! My Captain! by Walt Whitman
(12.11)

Slide 18 - Slide

This item has no instructions

' What is a major theme of "O Me! O Life?" '

Slide 19 - Slide

Existence, expectations versus reality, and struggle are the major themes of this poem. The poem revolves around one question that hinders the bliss of the speaker’s life. The poet questions the existence and futility of life. Although man has invented various objects for his ease and comfort, still he is unable to cope up with the challenges of life. He acknowledges that human achievement and speedy development is normal. Hence, people get disappointed in their lives. However, he does not suggest any solution to these problems. He only wants his readers to stop and realize how they are contributing to humanity simply by living.

Slide 20 - Video

This item has no instructions

Slide 21 - Video

This item has no instructions

  24 - 47 min

Slide 22 - Slide

unfettered: unrestrained or uninhibited; unrestricted
  24 - 47 min

Slide 23 - Slide

This item has no instructions

   Part 2:  24 - 47 min

Slide 24 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Slide 25 - Video

  • What is the essence of TRANSCENDANTLISM?
  • What did Thoreau discover in the cabin? 
Plato's Allegory of the Cave

Slide 26 - Slide

This item has no instructions

24 - 47 min

Slide 27 - Slide

Eliot emphasizes both the way that tradition shapes the modern artist and the way that a “really new” work of art makes us see that tradition anew.

In “Tradition and the Individual Talent,” Eliot advocates for the separation of art from artist and argues that tradition has less to do with imitation and more to do with understanding and expanding upon the intellectual and literary context in which one is writing
  24 - 47 min

Slide 28 - Slide

This item has no instructions

  Part 2: 24 - 47 min

Slide 29 - Slide

yield: surrender; capitulate
     Part 2: 24 - 47 min

Slide 30 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Part 3: 45 - 1.10 min

Slide 31 - Slide

Vocabulary Part 3:

sonorous: (of a person's voice or other sound) imposingly deep and full

make a collect call
' If it had been collect, it would've been daring' 
a long-distance telephone call that is to be paid for by the person or station receiving it.

  Part 3: 45  - 1.10 min

Slide 32 - Slide

This item has no instructions

  Part 3: 45 - 1.10 min

Slide 33 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Part 3: 47 - 1.10 min

Slide 34 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Part 3: 47 - 1.10 min

Slide 35 - Slide

This item has no instructions

 Part 4: 1.10 - 1.33 min

Slide 36 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Slide 37 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Part 5: 1.33 - 

Slide 38 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Slide 39 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Slide 40 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Part 5: 1.33 - 

Slide 41 - Slide

And this weak and idle theme,
No more yielding but a dream
gentles do not reprehend


idle: pointless
yield: give away to arguments
reprehend: reproach; rebuke
make amends: make compensation

Slide 42 - Video

This item has no instructions

Slide 43 - Slide

This item has no instructions

O Captain! My Captain! by Walt Whitman
elegy
metaphor
Abraham Lincoln (1809 -1865)
Civil War   (Union vs Confederation States) (1861 - 1865)
reunification
abolishment of slavery

Slide 44 - Slide

An elegy is a sad poem, usually written to praise and express sorrow for someone who is dead. Although a speech at a funeral is a eulogy, you might later compose an elegy to someone you have loved and lost to the grave.

Slide 45 - Slide


Ulysses by Alfred Lord Tennyson:
Ulysses is a man of adventure. The poem focuses on whether he could ever tolerate a simple, traditional home life. Instead, he imagines life on the open seas, the perils of his adventures, and the chances to demonstrate his bravery.

Ulysses, who symbolizes the grieving poet, proclaims his resolution to push onward in spite of the awareness that “death closes all”. As Tennyson himself stated, the poem expresses his own “need of going forward and braving the struggle of life” after the loss of his beloved Hallam.
 Part 3: 47 min - 1.10

Slide 46 - Slide

This item has no instructions

 Part 3: 47 min - 1.10 min
Speaker is amazed
Beaty is compared with vast; starry night
Poet compares his belowed beauty
to night - rather than daylight.
Inner life - her external beauty is an expression of her thoughts that dwell in her mind or her beautiful face. 
Her facial expressions eloquently but innocently express her inner goodness and peacefulness. 

Slide 47 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Slide 48 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Part 5: 1.33 - 

Slide 49 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Musee des Beaux Arts by W. A. Auden

Slide 50 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Slide 51 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Slide 52 - Video

This item has no instructions

Slide 53 - Slide

Musee des Beaux Arts is a poem that focuses on human suffering, tragedy and pain by contrasting the lives of those who suffer and those who do not. The vehicle by which this is achieved is the world of painting, in particular the work of the old masters.

Written in 1938, just before the start of WW2, it signalled an important change in Auden's way of life and expression. He left behind his political persona and began to develop one that was more spiritual in nature. 

Slide 54 - Slide

This item has no instructions