Saturday, May 14, 2016

British Literature -- Spring Grades

About the class, in general:
This British Literature class was a great pleasure for me.  Not only did I get to re-read some of my favorite pieces of literature, but I had the opportunity to discuss and “unpack” these with a wonderful group of students.  Each week they came prepared; not only had they read the sometimes challenging material, but they had insightful discussion questions that we used as a group to explore deeper meanings in the novels, poetry, and dramatic works; they all contributed to our discussions and added many perceptive opinions.

Because this class required a lot of reading, I didn’t assign any writing assignments.  At the beginning of the semester, I modeled the kind of discussion questions that would help us examine the assigned readings.  After those initial weeks, the students themselves were assigned to bring in questions for the class to consider and explore.  


Their grades are then somewhat subjective.  This was not a class in which a student could sit back, not read the assignments and refuse to participate.  A small class like this demanded much more interaction.  I don’t have any percentages or specific scores to use to determine a letter grade; however, as I considered each student’s grade for the semester, I asked myself these questions:
·         Did he/she come to class having read the assigned portions?  Could I tell the student’s comprehension via his/her comments and participation?
·         Did he/she bring thoughtful and insightful questions for the class to discuss?
·         Did he/she think carefully over the discussion questions and share individual comments?
·         Was he/she resistant to participating in the discussions?
·         Over the course of the class, did he/she grow in his/her abilities to analyze fiction, poetry, and drama?


Each of the students did marvelously, and my suggested grade for each is an “A.”  I hope they enjoyed the class as much as I did.   If they ever need some ideas for more good British literature to read, I’d be more than glad to help them find more good books, drama, or poetry to read.

Have a great summer!
Blessings,
Mrs. Prichard

Friday, May 13, 2016

British Literature Class Notes -- Week 15 (May 12)

Greetings!

We had a wonderful final class for our British Literature class.  We finished our last reading selection, The 39 Steps by John Buchan.  While the book is full of implausibilities, the action of the plot made it a fun read.  The discussion questions that the students brought not only had us talking about the book but about all of our literature selections this semester.









We only took about a third of our class time to discuss the book because I had planned a final exam.  It was a Jeopardy game and the class divided themselves into two teams..  (You can go here and play it for yourselves.)  The students did well and were rewarded with prizes.  











My goal is to have grades out by the end of the weekend..  I have to say that this is one of my favorite classes to teach. This year's group of students were especially loquacious, making the class discussions fascinating.  We have regularly unlocked out word-hoards!

Assignments for Next Week:
-- ABSOLUTELY NOTHING!!!

Links for this week:
Class Notes

Have a wonderful summer!
Mrs. Prichard


Thursday, April 28, 2016

Background to 39 Steps

Background
When John Buchan (1875 – 1940) wrote the novel, The Thirty-Nine Steps in 1915, he called it a “shocker, where the incidents defy the probabilities and march just inside the borders of the possible.” With secret ciphers, German conspiracies, ruthless foreign agents, and chance encounters, it fit this description: however, the book was written out of boredom as Buchan was confined to his bed in the winter of 1914 as he recovered from an ulcer. The Thirty-Nine Steps pits protagonist Richard Hannay, an ordinary guy, against a network of German spies preparing to storm Great Britain. The story can be seen as the battle between Good (the allies as represented by Hannay) and Evil (Germany and the Ottoman Empire as represented by the character of Professor Jordan). In 1935, the same year that author John Buchan became the Governor General of Canada,
 Alfred Hitchcock directed a film adaptation of The Thirty-Nine Steps, adding a love interest to the story. Alfred Hitchcock was a master of mystery and suspense. His films usually centred on either murder or espionage, with deception, mistaken identities and chase sequences complicating the plot. His film version of The Thirty-Nine Steps is no exception, including one of Hitchcock’s common themes of an innocent man, mistakenly suspected or accused of a crime, who must then track down the real perpetrator in order to clear himself.

John Buchan
The writer John Buchan was born the son of a clergyman in Perth, Scotland in 1875. He attended Glasgow and Oxford Universities, and started to publish his fiction whilst there. His career was as a barrister and later a very successful Civil Servant in the diplomatic corps. He ended up living in Canada as Governor-General and was honored with the title Baron Tweedsmuir. He wrote his stories primarily for his own entertainment, and The 39 Steps was begun during an illness in 1914 and completed 1915. Richard Hannay, hero of The 39 Steps, went on to feature in many later novels.
During WW1, and therefore at the time of this novel’s genesis, Buchan was a skilled propagandist for the British government. He will have been acutely aware of the atmosphere of mistrust and double-crossing pervasive during the period. The spy novel is the perfect way to express such fears of infiltration by the enemy, a key tool in the propagandist armory. In this context, one where the old world order is collapsing, and where central Europe is fighting the Allied powers, the novel The 39 Steps can be seen as a straightforward battle between good (the allies as represented by Hannay) and Evil (Germany and the Ottoman Empire as represented by professor Jordan).

About the Book

The Thirty-Nine Steps is one of the earliest examples of the 'man-on-the-run' thriller archetype subsequently adopted by Hollywood as an often-used plot device. In The Thirty-Nine Steps, Buchan holds up Richard Hannay as an example to his readers of an ordinary man who puts his country’s interests before his own safety. The story was a great success with the men in the First World War trenches. One soldier wrote to Buchan, "The story is greatly appreciated in the midst of mud and rain and shells, and all that could make trench life depressing."

British Literature Class Notes -- Week 13 (April 28)

Greetings!

We enjoyed another rousing discussion about our literature this week.  We've reached the end of a classic from the turn of the century, Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw.  As we read  quality works, we not only discuss themes, character development, and plots as they appear in the literature, but we also talk about the same ideas and how we see them reflected in our own lives.  For example, our discussion today dove into realms of psychology and the good ol' nature vs. nurture question.

I appreciate the discussion questions that they bring to class.  Every week, each one of them has a good set of insightful questions that promotes our lively discussions and helps us unpack our reading selection.

We are beginning our final book for this class:  The Thirty-Nine Steps.  This adventure novel written by Scottish author, John Buchan, is one of the first espionage thrillers.  His main character, Richard Hannay, has been described as a cross between Sherlock Holmes and James Bond.  It first appeared in 1915 as a serial in Blackwood's Magazine.  According to one commentary, this book would not have been a success "without Buchan's brisk characterization, loving evocation of Scottish landscape and his switchblade prose."    

I forgot to mention in class that for the last week I will be assigning the students a reflection paper.  This is their only writing assignment for the semester.  Also, we will have a final test on the last day.  But no worries, it will be in the form of a Bingo game!

Assignment for Next Week:
-- Read p. 1 - 42
-- Write 3 Discussion Questions

Links for this week:
Class Notes


Have a great weekend!
Mrs. Prichard

Thursday, April 21, 2016

British Literature Class Notes -- Week 12 (April 21)

Greetings!

We are once again in the realm of drama, reading George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion.  The title of the play is taken from the Greek myth about the Pygmalion, a man who hated women.  However, he found himself lonely, so he carved a statue of a woman.  Then, he fell in love with the statue and whined to Venus to give the statue life.  Venus did, and Pygmalion and his lady statue lived happily ever after.

For this week we read the first three acts of the drama.  Unlike Shakespeare, Shaw includes lots of stage directions and editorial commentary.  Our discussion questions had us talking about what changes might happen to Eliza and what Higgins was like.  We read aloud a number of passages.  For next week, we'll read the the rest of the play.

Assignments for Next Week:
-- Read Acts IV and V
-- Read the ending, p. 72 - 82.
-- Write 3 Discussion Questions

Saturday, April 16, 2016

British Literature Class Notes -- Week 11 (April 14)

Greetings!

I don't know if you are like me, but this time of year, when it seems that Spring might really be here and that we are done for good with winter for a while, I get a little cynical.  Sure, on this beautiful Saturday afternoon it's almost 80, but I'm not putting away the hats and mittens quite yet.  That being said, I'm soaking up as much sun and fresh air as I can.  Hope you are also having a great weekend!

We had a great class this week.  I know that I say that every week, but I really enjoy the students and the content for this class.  These past two weeks may have felt challenging as we dove into some Romantic and Victorian Poetry.  These are not the simple poems that we had in Writing 1 or Writing 2.  Some of these poems are pages long; there were longer ones that I didn't include.

This week we "unpacked" the following poems:  "The Lady of Shallott" by Tennyson, "My Last Duchess" by Browning, and two of Hopkins's poems, "God's Grandeur" and "Pied Beauty."  We talked about art, imagination, representation, inspiration, love, God's beauty, imperfections, etc. -- all common themes in poetry.

I've given to the students their next books, Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw.  This is a play from which the musical My Fair Lady is taken.  Students are to read Acts I, II, and III and write 3 Discussion Questions.

Assignments for Next Week:
-- Read Acts I, II, and III of Pygmalian
-- Write 3 Discussion Questions for the first half of the book.

Links for This Week:
Class Notes

Have a great week!
Mrs. Prichard

Sunday, March 27, 2016

British Literature Class Notes -- Week 9 (March 24)

This week in British Lit. we finished our discussion of Great Expectations.  This book has a number of plot twists, and the ending ties up a lot of loose ends.  As Dickens does in all of his books, he involves many characters and situations.  For parents who have never read this book, I encourage you to give them a read.

Our next unit is Romantic Poetry.  Students have handouts with a number of selections from Blake, Burns, Wordsworth, etc. Some students don't care at all for poetry, but I hope to help them see the art, beauty, and even brilliance in these poems.

We won't have class next week; our next class is on April 7. 

Assignment for April 7:
-- Read "Interpreting Poetry"
-- Read "Responding to Romantic Poetry"
-- Read the poems mentioned in the handout above

Links for this week:
Class Notes

Enjoy your break!
Mrs. Prichard

INTERPRETING POETRY


WHAT IS POETRY?
Poetry is often considered mystical or spiritual.  It has been called “the most intimate and volatile form of literary discourse” that can deepen “our capacity for personhood, our achievement of humanity.”  Poetry also “conveys heightened forms of perception, experience, meaning, or consciousness in heightened language.”  (Brogan, 938) As a “heightened mode of discourse,” poetry exhibits “intensified speech” by using conventions that are considered defining characteristics. (Hirsch, 27)

ELEMENTS OF POETRY
DICTION
                Diction refers to the poet’s choice of words.  Poets are sensitive to the subtle shades of meanings of words, to the possible double meanings of words, and to the denotative and connotative meanings.  Poets often choose words that contribute to the poem’s meaning on both a denotational and a connotation level.
Denotation:  the object or idea that the word represents; the dictionary meaning
Connotation:  the subjective, emotional association that a word has for one person or a group of people.
Wordplay:  double meanings and puns.

SYNTAX
                Syntax is sentence structure, the way words go together to make sentences. Poets often invert the normal word order so that they can make a sentence rhyme, to fit a metrical pattern, or to emphasize an idea.  Further difficulties arise because sentences are so long that we forget how they begin.  Another challenge occurs when words are left out or marked by eccentric punctuation.
Independent clauses:  simple sentences
Complex sentences:  sentences containing independent and subordinate causes.  Subordinate clauses begin with relative pronouns (that, what, which, who), subordinating conjunctions (because, since, although, whereas, once, wherever, etc.) and prepositions.


CHARACTERIZATION, POINT OF VIEW, PLOT, SETTING AND THEME
                Poetry shares many elements with other genres such as drama and fiction.  Many of the questions you ask yourself with short stories and novels you can apply to poetry.  Poems do not always offer a “story” in a conventional sense, but action may be implied, a place or time may be important, and characters may dramatize the key issues of the poem.
Point of View
                According to T.S. Eliot, in any poem there is always a speaker, “I” of the poem.  The first voice is the voice of the poet talking to himself (or to nobody).  The second voice is the voice of the poet addressing an audience, whether large or small.  The third is the voice of the poet when he is saying, not what he would say in his own person, but only what he can say within the limits of one imaginary character addressing another imaginary character.  (Eliot, 96)

Steps for interpreting these aspects of a poem:
1.     Paraphrase the poem.  This helps you understand every sentence or, at least, the major sections of the poem.
2.     Identify the speaker of the poem.  Underline the words and phrases that help characterize the speaker and bring out the speaker’s concerns.  Describe in detail the traits of the speaker and of any other characters in the poem.
3.     Describe the situation of the poem:  where is the speaker? What time of day is it? What season of day is it?  What historical occasion is the speaker writing about? 
4.     List the external and internal conflicts of the poem.
5.     Stat the issues that concern the speaker.  Explain the speaker’s ideas.  Note any changes in the speaker’s mood or ideas as the poem progresses.
6.     Describe the speaker’s tone (angry, lyrical, hopeful, bitter, sarcastic, sorrowful, etc.).  Note any changes of tone.
7.     Is the poet’s attitude different from the speaker’s attitude?
8.     Relate the poem’s title to its themes.
9.     Explain any allusions in the poem.






IMAGERY
Descriptive Language
                Imagery represents the descriptive passages of a poem.  Imagery causes the reader to become experientially involved in the subject matter of the poem.  The poet often uses descriptive imagery to underscore other elements in a poem, such as tone, meaning, and characterization.  All of the senses can be engaged (touch, visual, motion, sound, thermal/temperature)

Figurative Language
                 A second consideration about imagery refers to the muse of language that is a conscious departure from normal or conventional ways of saying things.  “Rhetorical” figures of speech refer to unusual rearrangements of normal word order done convey a specific idea or image.

Figurative Language
Tropes (literally “turns”) extend the meaning of words beyond their literal meaning.
Similes:  Using comparative words (like or as), a simile makes an analogous connection between two items.              
Metaphors:  Generally, a metaphor is any analogy which shows similarity between things that are basically different.  Specifically, a metaphor is a type of figurative language that assumes a connection or comparison without using like or as.
Personification:  A more indirect analogy, personification bestows human characteristics to any inanimate object, animal, or abstract quality.
Extended Metaphor:  When a poet carries out a singular analogy throughout an entire poem, he has written an extended metaphor.

Questions to ask about Imagery:
1.     What senses does the poet appeal to?
2.     What analogies does the poet imply or directly state?
3.     Why does the poet use these particular images and analogies?  How are they significant to the meaning, tone, and effect of the poem?

Analyzing Descriptive Language.
1.     Mark the descriptive images.  For each image, name the sense appealed to.  Characterize the dominant impression these images make.
2.     Explain the relationship of descriptive images to the speaker’s state of mind.
3.     Describe how the descriptive images create a sense of the time of day and season of the year.
4.     Note any progression in the descriptive images; for example, from day to night, hot to cold, soft to loud, color to color, slow to fast.
5.     Explain how the descriptive images help create atmosphere and mood.  Slow movements, for example, are conducive to melancholy, speed to exuberance and excitement.

Analyzing Figurative Language
1.     Mark the similes in the poem.  Underline or circle the words that signal the comparisons (words such as like, as similar to, resembles.)  Explain the implications of the analogies (that is, what they contribute to the meaning of the poem.
2.     Mark the metaphors in the poem.  Explain the implications of the analogies.
3.     Mark any personification in the poem.  Underline the words and phrases that make the personification clear.
4.     Poets often use analogies to help make an abstract quality, such as “love” or “beauty” or “courage.”  Name the abstract quality the poet wants to clarify and the object the poet is comparing it to.
5.     List the senses appealed to in each analogy.  Describe the dominant sensory impression created by the analogies.

Symbolism
Symbolism appeals to poets because symbols are highly suggestive.  A symbol is an object that represents an abstract idea or ideas.  The most powerful symbols are those that do not exactly specify the ideas they represent and carry meaning on multiple levels.







THE SOUND OF POETRY:  MUSICAL ELEMENTS
Rhythm:  One of the most naturally pleasing elements of poetry, rhythm “creates a pattern of yearning and expectation, of recurrence and difference.  It is related to the pulse, the heartbeat, the way we breathe.  It takes us into ourselves; it takes us out of ourselves.  It differentiates us; it unites us to the cosmos.” (Hirsch, 21)

Meter:  All human speech has rhythm, but poetry regularizes that rhythm into recognizable patterns.  These are called meters.  Metrical patterns vary depending on the sequence in which the poets arrange the accented (á) and unaccented (ă) syllables.  The unit that determines that arrangement is the foot; a foot is one unit of rhythm.
                Here are the most used metrical feet:
                iamb:  ă á (an unaccented syllable followed by an accented syllable)
                trochee:  á ă
                anapest:  ă  ă  á  (think ¾ time)
                dactyl:  á ă  ă  (think ¾ time)
                spondee:  á á

Measuring Meter:  The most utilized metrical pattern in English poetry is accentual-syllabic, a pattern based on the number of stresses and the number of syllables per line.  The best known pattern is iambic pentameter, which consists of five stresses (iambs) and ten syllables.  The following are the names of accentual-syllabic line lengths:
                monometer (one foot)
                dimeter (two feet)
                trimeter (three feet)
                tetrameter (four feet)
                pentameter (five feet)
                hexameter (six feet)
                heptameter (seven feet)
                octameter (eight feet)

Scanning is a process where you mark accented and unaccented syllables with symbols.

WORD SOUNDS
Devices using word sounds:
Onomatopoeia:  the use of words that sound like what they mean (“buzz,” “boom,” “hiss,” “pop,” etc.)
Alliteration:  the repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words or at the beginning of accented syllables.
Assonance:  the repetition of vowel sounds followed by the different consonant sounds.
Consonance:  the repetition of final consonant sounds that are preceded by different vowel sounds.  Consonance is the opposite of alliteration which features initial consonance sounds.
Rhyme:  the repetition of accented vowels and the sounds that follow.  There are subcategories of rhyme:
                masculine rhyme:  the rhymed words end with a stressed syllables.
                feminine rhyme:  the rhymed words end with one or more unaccented syllables
                internal rhyme:  the rhymed words are within the line
                end rhyme:  the rhymed words appear at the ends of lines
                approximate rhyme:  the words are close to rhyming

Analyzing Word Sounds
1.     What sound devices does the poet use?
2.     Why does the poet use them?
3.     How do they establish the poem’s tone, atmosphere, theme, setting, characterization, and emotional qualities?
4.     Underline instance of alliteration, assonance, and consonance in the poem.  Explain the relationship between these devices and the sense of the lines where they occur.
5.     Circle rhymed words.  Explain similarities and contrasts the rhymed words underscore.
6.     Circle words that have meaningful attractive sound qualities.
7.     When the sounds of a poem are harsh and grating, the effect is called cacophony.  When they are pleasing and harmonious, the effect is called euphony.  Underline instances of cacophony or euphony.
8.     Describe any sound devices in the poem that catch you by surprise.




STRUCTURE
Structure is the way the whole poem is organized and put together.  Poets give structure to their poems in two overlapping ways:  by organizing ideas according to a logical plan and by establishing a pattern of units. 

Lines:  Poetry is organized in lines while prose is divided into paragraphs. They use various criteria for choosing line lengths.  The best known criterion is meter – the number of feet per line.

Enjambment:  A decision poets face is whether to end-stop or encamp their lines.  Enjambment is the continuance of a phrase from one line to the next so that there is no pause at the end of the line.  An end-stopped line has a definite pause at the end.  Enjambed and end-stopped lines create different effects.  Enjambed lines read more naturally, like someone speaking.  Even in poems with end-rhymes, when you read aloud a poem with enjambed lines you don’t hear the rhyme.
Blank Verse:  A line form that is always enjambed is blank verse.  The sentences run from line to line as if the lines don’t exist.

Stanza:  Stanzas in a poem typically resemble one another structurally.  The have the same number of lines, length of lines, metrical patterns, and rhyme schemes.  They are physically separated by a space.  Poems with stanzas are strophic; those that don’t are stichic.

Rhyme scheme:  Any pattern of end rhyme is a traditional method of organizing stanzas.  Rhyme scheme refers to that pattern.  Poets can create any rhyme scheme, but they often work instead within the confines of already established poetic structures.

The Sonnet:  The most famous fixed form in English, sonnets consist of fourteen lines of iambic pentameter. A Shakespearean sonnet rhymes abab/cdcd/efef/gg and has a structural division of three quatrains and a couplet.  A Petrarchan sonnet rhymes abbaabba in the octave and cdecde in the sestet.  Each kind of sonnet has a turn, a point in the poem at which the poet shifts from one meaning or mood to another.  The turn in the Shakespearean sonnet occurs between lines 12 and 13.  In the Petrarchan sonnet the turn occurs between the octave and the sestet.

The Ballad:  Defined as “a song, transmitted orally, which tells a story,” (Abrams, 18), ballads feature intense conflicts, emotional and melodramatic narratives, and are condensed retelling of portions of the whole story.








------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Abrams, M.H.  A Glossary of Literary Terms.  7th ed.  Fort Worth, TXHarcourt Brace College        Publishers, 1999.
Brogan, T.V. F. “Poetry.” The New Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics.  Ed. Alex
Hirsch, Edward.  How to Read a Poem and Fall in Love with PoetrySan Diego:  Harcourt,             1999.
Preminger and T.V.F. Brogan.  Princeton, NJPrinceton UP, 1993.

Eliot, T. S. “The Three Voices of Poetry.”  On Poetry and PoetsNew York: Octagon Books,           1975,      96 – 112.

Romantic Period Literature Characteristics


Love of Nature
Emotions and instinct became more important than reason. There was a glorification of “The Natural Man”, the “noble savage,” and the primitive and untutored personality. Primitivism, meaning the thought that the simple and unsophisticated life was best, also grew popular. These ideas led to an interest in old civilizations, glorification of Greek society, a study in archeology developed as a science, with Egyptian and Medieval areas important to study. Also, the Medieval studies, urged by nationalism, helped nations develop identity, which was an important aspect of Romantic Period ideas.


Love of the Common Man
The social and economic classes were disparaged, or put down. An era of revolutions opened when the governments were overthrown, due to the fact that it often seemed to require elimination of social classes. The American writers also provided a way to satisfy a cultural need for lore, or a mythology suitable to a new nation. The literature presented this in many pieces.


Neo-Classicism
Neo-Classicism means a return to the Classic ideals of: clearness, elegance, symmetry, and repose produced by attention to traditional forms. It was sometimes synonymous with excellence or artistic quality of high distinction. Also, the term refers to the admiration and imitation of Greek and Roman literature, art, and architecture.


The Supernatural
Fascination with the supernatural was a characteristic of the Romantic Period. This included: the unexplainable, horror, and anything that evoked the emotion of fear.


Nationalism
Nationalism was a reaction against the dominating influences of German literature. Writers aimed to write works which were expressive and characteristic of their own nationality by: using scenes from their country’s life, history, folk-tales and legends as a basis for operas, songs, literature, and symphonic poems.


Heroism
The idea that anyone, especially the common man, could be a hero is a characteristic of the Romantic Period. Heroism is the overcoming of our natural fears and limitations to achieve great things.


Strange and Far-away Places
This characteristic relates to the love of exotic locations around the world and in time and space. This could include the past or the future as well as strange places or situations in the present.


Responding to Romantic Poetry


Read all of the poems on the handout.  The poems below are to be read more carefully.  Choose two poet/poem selections and give short answers to the questions given.


Blake – “The Chimney Sweeper” (both poems)
·         Discuss the contrasts of the two poems.
·         What ideas of injustice are presented in the individual poems?
·         What images or symbols are given?


Wordsworth – “Tintern Abbey”
·         What effects do the objects of nature have on the poet
·         What part does memory play in the poem?
·         What is the tone of the poem?


Coleridge – “The Aeolian Harp”
·         An Aeolian (or wind) harp is symbolic of both order and wildness in nature.  How is this expressed in the poem?
·         What conflicts of faith or philosophy present themselves in this poem?
·         What analogy is Coleridge making with the harp?


Byron –“ She Walks in Beauty”
·         To what aspects of nature is the woman’s beauty compared?
·         What opposites are mentioned?
·         How does the poet express ideas of purity and innocence?


Shelley – “Hymn to Intellectual Beauty”
·         What qualities of beauty does the poem explore?
·         What effect does the intellectual idea of beauty (“spirit of beauty”) have on mankind?
·         What hints does the poem give that Shelley is an atheist?


Keats – “Ode on a Grecian Urn”
·         How does the urn exist outside of time constraints?
·         How does the poet try to engage with the stories on the urn?

·         What aspects of the permanent nature of the scenes on the urn are positive and what are negative?

Sunday, March 13, 2016

British Literature Class Notes -- Week 7 (March 10)

Greetings!

My apologies for the lateness of this e-mail.  We had a busy weekend with a conference and out of town guests.

For a change of pace, we took our discussion to the coffee shop at Grace.  With coffees and a few chicken tenders in hand, we talked through some of the details of Pip's life and his "expectations." 

With a book of this length, it can be hard to keep up with the reading.  We talked about some ways to do this, including listening to audio versions of the book.  Personally, I've been listening to the free Librivox version to supplement my reading.  I've read Great Expectations multiple times, and listening to it gives me a new perspective.

Next week we will be in the class room.  We'll watch portions of an older BBC version of the book.  This performance was done as a mini-series and is probably the one that is truest to the text.

Assignments for Next Week:
-- Read to page 286
-- Write 3 Discussion Questions

Links for this Week:
Class Notes 

See y'all on Thursday,
Mrs. Prichard

Thursday, March 3, 2016

British Literature Class Notes -- Week 6 (March 3)

Greetings!

A week off from class was a nice break, but it is also good to be back to our CHAT classes.  

We've started on our longest book of the semester, Great Expectations by Charles Dickens.  This is not only a long book, it is a rich book of colorful characters and a unique plot that twists and turns.  We took time today to read aloud some portions and to discuss Pip's character, his relationship to Joe and Mrs. Joe, and his situation with Miss Havisham and Estella.  We commented on those situations in which people were treated unjustly.  We even did some brainstorming about which current Hollywood celebrities could play the various roles.

In class I mentioned some media sources, which I will include here, but I would like to caution students to NOT watch any videos as a substitute for reading the text.  A number of the current films do not remain true to the original novel.

Another helpful option that I discovered this week is that a free recording of Great Expectations is on iTunes.  Even though I've read the book several times, listening to it caused various sections to "pop out."  It seemed as if my brain responded differently when listening than it did while reading.  You can go to the Librivox website to find the same version that I've been listening to.

Next week, the class will meet in the coffee shop at Grace Church.  The students thought it a good idea.  They can buy their own treats if they want.

Assignments for Next Week:
Read Great Expectations, p. 96 - 191
Bring 3 Discussion Questions

Links for this week:
Class Notes


Have a great weekend!
Mrs. Prichard

Great Expectations Videos and Audio

In class I mentioned some media sources, which I will include here, but I would like to caution students to NOT watch any videos as a substitute for reading the text.  A number of the current films do not remain true to the original novel.

When you've finished the book, here are some videos that you might want to watch:
Great Expectations -- the 1946 version.  (This one is my FAVORITE!!!)
          If the above link doesn't work, here is one from Youtube.

Great Expectations -- cartoon version

Some of you may find these audio versions of Great Expectations helpful.  While I wouldn't suggest consuming the whole book in this manner, auditory learners may benefit from hearing and reading.  Or you could listen on a long car trip or while you're doing dishes for your family.







Friday, February 19, 2016

British Literature Class Notes -- Week 5 (February 18)

Greetings!

We had a good class this week.  Even though we are a small group, the discussions are lively and thoughtful.  Each week they have brought great questions that have helped us unpack our piece of literature.

We finished Much Ado About Nothing by Wm. Shakespeare.  This is a delightful play, with some elements that have become common in contemporary movies and TV shows:  guy and girl hate each other then love each other; mistaken identities lead to conflict and confusion.

Our next piece of literature is going to be our hardest, primarily because it's the longest.  We will take the next four weeks to read Great Expectations by Charles Dickens.  Students will need to read at least 90 pages a week.  To do this, I recommend they read a little bit each day.  They won't want to leave it until the day before class.  If it helps, they can listen to audio versions of the book.

I handed out to the students some background information about our book and about Charles Dickens.  I also gave them some explanations about the Victorian era of literature.

We don't have class next week.  Our next class is on March 3.

Assignments for March 3:
-- Read p. 1 - 96 of Great Expectations
-- 3 Discussion Questions

Links for this week:
Class Notes

Have a great weekend and a good break!
Mrs. Prichard

Saturday, February 13, 2016

British Literature Class Notes -- Week 4 (February 11)

Greetings!

Again this week, we had a lively discussion about our literature selection, Much Ado About Nothing.  The students brought great discussion classes for us to work through.  We began our discussion with a quick overview of the plot and the characters.  While this is not one of Shakespeare's more complex plays, I feel that as a group we are able to dig a little deeper into the motivations and themes.  This week we discussed Benedick's and Beatrice's relationship, the idea of lies, spying, and overheard conversations, the theme of masks and mistaken identity, and character development.

For those who are interested, Librivox has an audiobook for the whole play.  Feel free to listen to this recording with the book in hand.

Next week will finish Much Ado and introduce Great Expectations by Charles Dickens. 

Assignments for Next Week:
-- Read Acts III, IV, & V of Much Ado
-- Write 3 Discussion Questions

Links for this Week:
Class Notes
Utah University Much Ado performance (Latin American setting)
Bexhill Theater Performance  (1945 setting)

Have a great weekend,
Mrs. Prichard