introduction project

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EngelsMiddelbare schoolhavoLeerjaar 2

This lesson contains 24 slides, with text slides.

Items in this lesson

Welcome!
Happy to see you today!
Take a seat and wait till we get started!

Slide 1 - Slide

Today:
- What is literary analysis? - 
- Why literary analysi? - 
- Literary terms - 
- Your choice - 
- Time to work - 

Slide 2 - Slide

Goal
At the end of the lesson, you can:
  • Explain why literary analysis is important.
  • Recognise 6 different literary items in a story

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The task
  • Due: May 20th 
  • Do: make a literary analysis of Deltarune/4 short stories
  • How: play the game/read the stories and answer the questions in the document
  • Choice: you can choose if you want to play a videogame or read the short stories (more on that later)

Slide 4 - Slide

What is literary analysis?
Looking at different elements of a story to understand them on a deeper level.


Slide 5 - Slide

Why literary analysis?
Practice reading complicated texts.
Learn to see the deeper, hidden meaning of things.
Practice analytical thinking.
Learn about other times and cultures or explore new and interesting ideas.
Practice using proof to support your claims, and how to look for such proof. 

Slide 6 - Slide

Some important terms
  • Theme
  • Foreshadowing
  • Goal and Conflict
  • Types of characters
  • Point of view
  • Irony

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Theme
The underlying idea of the story
Take the moral of the story, and shorten it to 1, 2 or 3 words
multiple themes per story

Example: 
The lion king 
Themes: destiny, feeling guilty, good vs evil, trust and betrayal

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Foreshadowing
The hints that point at things later to come
usually not very obvious at first, but when you look back it all makes much more sense

example: 
The Incredibles. Edna Mode says "no capes!". Later the villain gets sucked into a jet engine by his cape. 

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Goal and conflict
Goal is the thing the character wants most
But of course they can't just reach their goal, that would be boring, there has to be a problem preventing them from reaching their goal.

Conflict happens when two different goals don't match up and go against each other

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Conflict
Internal conflict & external conflict 
Internal = struggle with yourself 
Example: Lion king. Simba feels he should help but he is scared.

External = struggle with things outside of yourself
External can be a lot of things: other people, society, nature, etc.
Example: Lion king. Scar wants to be king, but Simba too.

Slide 11 - Slide

Types of characters
Static vs Dynamic character
static = unchanged 
dynamic = changes through the story

Example: the Lion King
Simba changes throughout the story, so he's Dynamic
Zazu (the bird) stays pretty much the same, he's Static 

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Point of View
Through who's eyes do you experience the story? Who 'tells' the story?

"I woke up this morning and walked down the stairs when I noticed my dog was missing."
"She woke up this morning and when she walked down the stairs she noticed her dog was missing."

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Point of View
First-person vs third-person point of view

First-person: look through someone's eyes. 
- often talks about 'I' or 'we'

Third-person: floats above it all
- often talks about 'she' 'he' or 'they'

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Irony
Irony in stories are the surprising little things that keep the story interesting. They are the things that are different from what they seem at first.

3 types of irony: 
Verbal Irony - Situational Irony - Dramatic Irony

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Irony
Verbal Irony: someone says something but they mean something else. Also known as Irony.
Situational Irony: a situation doesn't turn out at all like how you expected it to
Dramatic Irony: as the reader/watcher you know something already that the main character doesn't know. Makes you scream "don't go in there!" at the screen during a horror movie

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Any questions? 
you can always ask more questions later, but it's easier to ask them now :)

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Which assignment do you want?

Before you choose, let me explain a little about the options

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Short stories
  • 4 short stories to read
  • Each story is only about 10 pages long
  • Each story has a few questions about them, all with 1 theme

  • stories: The Landlady, The Paper Menagerie, The Knowers and The Lottery

Slide 19 - Slide

The game: Deltarune
- Play 1 game: Deltarune
- You only need to play chapter 1
- Can be finished in about 3 hours
- Answer all the questions about the 
game

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Who wants which?
I need at least 5 pupils who want to do the short stories assignment and at least 10 who want to do the game assignment

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Get to work
Take a look at the assignment and get a head start!

Slide 22 - Slide

Goal check
At the end of the lesson, you can:
  • Explain why literary analysis is important.
  • Recognise 6 different literary items in a story

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Bye!
Have a nice day!

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