
English 11 Unit 3-1
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•
English
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11th Grade
•
Easy
Standards-aligned
Cynthia Phillips
Used 4+ times
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17 Slides • 4 Questions
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English 11 Unit 3-1
The American Narrative
Humor and Subjectivity
3-1 Assignments due 2/28
3-2 Assignments due 3/05
3-3 Assignments due 3/08
3.4.3 CST Unit test due date 3/11
Mark Twain
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Objectives
Identify elements of humor and satire.
Analyze the descriptive and humorous elements of a text.
Removed the discussion objective
Write a humorous narrative.
Use sensory language to convey vivid experiences.
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Mark Twain is a pen name. His real name is
Samuel Clemens He lived from 1835-1910. He
wrote to entertain, but often used his writing
to criticize flaws in society. He used humor
to express his feelings.
He had an enormous effect on American culture
and literature.
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
Life on the Mississippi
Numerous short stories -- "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras
County"
3.1 Overview and 3.1.2 page 1
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American Realism 3.1.2 page 2
We now leave Romanticism with its focus on beauty and Idealism.
Twain's writing is dedicated to real people, real speech, and real situations---- marks the birth of a new literary era:
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To make his stories more realistic he represented real speech patterns. He wrote conversations as they would have sounded in real life. He altered his writing to show the dialect of a characer.
Dialect 3.1.2 page 3
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Satire 3.1.2 page 4
Often used to point out the flaws of an important person, event, concept, or institution with the goal of pushing for a change. Often presented with humorous techniques.
Became very important in the Realism movement during Civil War times. Lots of flaws in society then, so writers used a lot of satire.
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn pointed out society's misguided ideas about African Americans.
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Understatement -- makes something seem less important than it really is. This helps emphasize its importance.
Hyperbole -- exaggerates to make a point. It is more direct than understatement.
These often accompany satire.
3.1.2 page 5
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Multiple Choice
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Multiple Choice
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Multiple Choice
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Situational irony 3.1.2 page 6
Irony has to do with the difference between what you expect to happen and what actually happens.
The police station gets robbed.
The fire station burns down.
A social media boasts complains about how useless social media is.
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Sarcasm 3.1.2 page 7
Another satirical technique. This is also in the irony family. It's called verbal irony.
It is used when you say the opposite of what you mean for effect.
You're involved in an accident-- and say, "Oh yeah, this is just what I needed today."
Someone punches you right in the face. You see stars and say, "Is that all you've got?"
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Match
understatement
irony
sarcasm
hyperbole
That guy's ability to beatbox is a little unique.
Doug told everyone they had no right to criticize free speech.
Best idea ever!
I would never try to get out of raking the yard.
That guy's ability to beatbox is a little unique.
Doug told everyone they had no right to criticize free speech.
Best idea ever!
I would never try to get out of raking the yard.
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Literary Nonfiction 3.1.2 page 11
Non-fiction so it's true, but it's meant to read like a story or novel, not like an encyclopedia article. This means it's more enjoyable and engaging for the reader.
Twain's memoir Life on the Mississippi recounts his days as a steamboat pilot on the Mississippi River.
Read 3.1.4 an excerpt from Life on the Mississippi.
3.1.6 Discuss eliminated
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Non-fiction vs. Literary non-fiction
Typical nonfiction, like many news articles, tries to be objective — telling the truth without adding personal opinion.
However, literary nonfiction presents truth through a subjective narrator. It also uses detailed descriptions (imagery).
3.1.7 pages 3-6 The entire 3.1.7 Study helps you
understand Life on the MIssissippi
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Idiom 3.1.7 page 7
A figure of speech that means something different than a literal translation of the words would lead one to believe.
For example, "it's raining cats and dogs" is a common idiom.
"Your Mom will hit the ceiling if we're late for dinner."
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Dialogue 3.1.9 page 9
Realistic dialogue adds realism to your narrative.
Some elements of realistic dialogue are dialect, figures of speech and idioms. Also take note of the punctuation.
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3.1.9 & 3.1.0 Prepare a Narrative
Write a narrative about a humorous situation. Whether you focus on a real event or make up a fictional one, you must use comedic techniques and rich description to bring the experience to life.
This writing assignment will focus on the following skills:
Creating a first-person narrator with a clear perspective
Creating a funny situation or problem
Writing realistic dialogue
Writing vivid description
Be sure to check the rubric! It asks for 2 comedic techniques---7 pts
Description that appeals to the senses and creates a vivid setting -- 7 pts
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Let's investigate that rubric!!
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What comedic techniques did we study?
PLUS Sarcasm........ which is a form of irony
3.1.9 Page 4
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In the CHAT to ME
Write at least 2 of the comedic techniques we talked about today.
English 11 Unit 3-1
The American Narrative
Humor and Subjectivity
3-1 Assignments due 2/28
3-2 Assignments due 3/05
3-3 Assignments due 3/08
3.4.3 CST Unit test due date 3/11
Mark Twain
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