Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

16th, 20th & 23rd March 
Essay question for mid-term grade 
Further exploration of Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close 
"The Sixth Borough"  


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This lesson contains 21 slides, with interactive quiz and text slides.

Items in this lesson

16th, 20th & 23rd March 
Essay question for mid-term grade 
Further exploration of Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close 
"The Sixth Borough"  


Slide 1 - Slide

Lesson materials 16th, 20th & 23rd March 
1. I will introduce your essay assignment. 
2. You will complete the additional analysis material in this presentation before you start your essay as it will be useful for your understanding of the novel and, therefore, your analysis. 

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Essay for mid-term grade 
As we cannot sit our Socratic seminar at the moment or write an analysis paper at school, we would like you to write an essay showing your understanding and analysis of the novel. Use literary analysis terminology and academic language in your essay. Your essay will have 5 paragraphs: Introduction, part 1, part 2 and part 3 and a conclusion. 
There are two choices on the next two slides. Make your choice and upload it to the ELO hand in assignment by Thursday 26th March before midnight. Always use PEED in your body paragraphs. Construct a clear thesis at the end of your introduction and topic sentences for each paragraph. 

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Topic 1: Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close is, at its roots, a study of human yearning for love in the face of brutal cataclysm. In the novel, characters lose each other and find each other in the crucible of tragedy. Write an essay about this in three parts:
Part 1) What is lost to the major character of the novel in the wake of the attack of September 11, 2001? How are existing bonds strengthened in the wake of this tragedy? In this paragraph, discuss the relationships among Oskar, Mom, and Grandma.
Part 2) Write a paragraph about the bombing of Dresden. How does this horrific event of World War II affect the Schell and Schmidt families? Who is lost in this bombing? How does the bombing, in the end, lead to another marriage and the birth of a child?
Part 3) In summation, discuss how a marriage that was destroyed by the memories of Dresden is reunited in the wake of September 11th. Who returns to whom in the aftermath? What characters begin to learn about their roots as a result of this reunion?

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Topic 2
The structure of the novel Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close is unusual from the beginning, with the mixing of different narrators and syntax styles, but Jonathan Safran Foer further muddies the narrative waters by having the narrative regularly interrupted by pages that contain something other than plot. Write an essay about these pages, discussing what their connection to the narrative is. Who, presumably, has inserted them into the novel and why? How does their inclusion affect the way the novel is perceived as an object? What does it become?
Part 1) Photos
Part 2) Pages with a single phrase on them.
Part 3) Blank pages.

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Consider the following three pictures 
Answer these questions in your exercise book:
1. What is the atmosphere created in the picture?
2. Where and when to you think this picture was taken? 
3. What clues did you use to make that guess? 

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Read the following information 
Do you know know where and when the photos were taken? 

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Metaphor 
An expression often found in literature that describes a person or object by referring to something that is considered to have similar characteristics to the person or object. 
"The mind is an ocean" or "the city is a jungle" are both metaphors. 
Metaphor and simile (remind yourself with this video) are the most commonly used figures of speech used in everyday language. 
source: Cambridge dictionary 

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The Sixth Borough 
Consider carefully "The Sixth Borough" pgs 217 -223. Find two short quotes from the text that you think express the meaning of the chapter somehow.
Add your quotes to the mind map on the next slide. 
What does this chapter mean in the context of the novel? Write down your answer. 
When was this story told in the chronology of the story? Is that important? Why? 

Slide 16 - Slide

"The Sixth Borough"

Slide 17 - Mind map

The Sixth Borough 
If you go to Wikipedia  you can see that the metaphorical term "sixth borough" was already in use before Jonathan Safran Foer used this term for his extended metaphor. Possible ideas: 
The Sixth Borough is a metaphor for Oskar and his dad
A metaphor for Oskars journey
Growing up and leaving your childhood behind 
9/11 part of the city is lost and frozen in time
Losing others when memories are frozen in time


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Figuritive Language 
 Figurative language and other literary devices are elements within a novel that have a deeper meaning than just their literal meaning within the reality of the story. 
 Give a possible explanation of the following examples and name the literary devices Foer used Consider - symbol, metaphor, simile, allusion, etc.
  1.  Oskar’s description that he is wearing “heavy boots” 
  2. Oskar description that he “zipped himself into the sleeping bag of himself” 
  3. What is the significance of colour in the novel? Why does Oskar wear all white? What about the use of black in the novel? 
  4. What about the continued reference to the key, doorknobs and locks? 
  5. The pictures in the novel. What do they refer to? Why have they been included? 
  6. How and why are birds referred to in the novel. 

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An Interview with Jonathan Safran Foer. Answer the questions on the next slide.
Interviewer: How did the idea for the novel originate? 
 Jonathan Safran Foer: …To make a long story short, I’ve tried to follow my instincts. I’ve tried to write the book I would want to read, rather than the book I would want to write. I’ve tried never to ask if something was smart, but instead if it felt genuine. A set of themes rose to the surface: silence, invention, anxiety, naiveté, absence, the difficulty of expressing love, war… I felt I couldn’t push them down, and I chose not to try to. Voices became pronounced. 
Some characters became vivid, others vanished. A plot… happened. If it sounds inefficient, I’ve described it properly. I cannot imagine how I could have been less efficient. But maybe inefficiency is the point. 
One can use a map and drive to a destination. Or one can follow the most interesting, beautiful roads–trusting oneself, trusting the car, and trusting the logic of the pavement– and end up where you couldn’t have realized you wanted to be until you got there. Writing, for me, is about following roads. And that intuitive, wandering approach explains not only why this book is so far from where I started, but why I feel it so personally, so viscerally, and so, well, loudly and closely. 
 
This excerpt is taken from an interview with the author on http://www.bookbrowse.com 

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Answer these questions in your exercise book
  1. What are some of the themes that Jonathan Safran Foer mentions in the interview excerpt? What other themes did we discuss in class? 
  2. How did he manage to end up with the novel that he did? 
  3. What metaphor does Foer use to describe his process of writing? 
  4. Apart from the attacks on 9/11 and Dresden, which other attack is described in the novel? Why do you think Foer includes them? 

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