Hey ALL!!!
I hope it's okay for me to take a second to be a hackneyed teacher and say: "I'm so excited to see how this blog works for our class!"
Now that that's done, let's get down to what you all visited the blog for...homework.
1. Please make sure you have notes on the background narration found on pages 4-7 of The Crucible.
2. Read to page 24 (Abigail's line: "John, pity me, pity me!") and annotate, looking for important lines or examples of diction.
3. Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper (you can type it or handwrite it):
In class, we spoke about the importance of the first impression. Take a close look at Abigail Williams in these first pages. What is your first impression? Cite at least two specific lines from the pages to support your claim. This should be a well developed paragraph.
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Setting a Purpose for Your Reading
As you read "Act I" of The Crucible, please be sure that you can answer the following eight questions:
1.What happens in the woods before Act I that causes Betty’s mysterious illness?
2.What are Dr. Griggs’ findings?
3.What is the real reason that Abigail cannot find work?
4.Why is Ann Putnam convinced that her daughter is bewitched?
5.What shocking thing does Betty try to do when she awakes, and of what does she accuse Abigail?
6.Describe Rebecca Nurse’s thoughts about the sick children.
7.What three things does Abigail say that Tituba has done to her?
8.What does Tituba say to avoid being whipped and hanged?
1.What happens in the woods before Act I that causes Betty’s mysterious illness?
2.What are Dr. Griggs’ findings?
3.What is the real reason that Abigail cannot find work?
4.Why is Ann Putnam convinced that her daughter is bewitched?
5.What shocking thing does Betty try to do when she awakes, and of what does she accuse Abigail?
6.Describe Rebecca Nurse’s thoughts about the sick children.
7.What three things does Abigail say that Tituba has done to her?
8.What does Tituba say to avoid being whipped and hanged?
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Class Notes
Notes about "Young Goodman Brown" and "To My Dear and Loving Husband"
- Hawthorne vs. Anne Bradstreet
- Anne Bradstreet
- came from England to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630 as part of the Great Migration of Puritans
- Religious
- Known as much more intelligent than the typical Puritan woman
- came from England to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630 as part of the Great Migration of Puritans
- Nathaniel Hawthorne
- descended from the Hathornes and the Mannings
- Ancestors
- Major William Hathorne (c. 1606/7-1681), known for his persecution of Quakers
- John Hathorne (1641-1717), the son of Major William and Anna Hathorne and a magistrate of the Court of Oyer and Terminer who was the stern interrogator of the accused witches.
- He was intrigued, even haunted, by his paternal ancestors, and they appear in his fiction on more than one occasion.
- Major William Hathorne (c. 1606/7-1681), known for his persecution of Quakers
- descended from the Hathornes and the Mannings
- Puritan Beliefs about Humanity
- All humans are sinners because even though people have free will but will naturally choose evil
- Man lived in darkness without power
Puritan response to this horror
- Guarding the LIGHT (God) with rigorous DEVOTION
- God= narrow searchlight probing darkness of the universe, lighting only small group of the Elect
- Guarding the LIGHT (God) with rigorous DEVOTION
- Man can achieve good only through control and self discipline
- self-reliance
- Industry (work)
- Frugality
Thus man has limited ability to choose between good & evil
- self-reliance
- Imagination dominated by the presence of EVIL
- All humans are sinners because even though people have free will but will naturally choose evil
- Puritan Beliefs about Marriage
- marriage was a civil union, a contract, not a sacred rite
- Love and responsibility between a married couple was equal to a moral and religious duty.
- Through a true, righteous marriage, the reward of everlasting life through love will be obtained
- Marriage was often used as a metaphor for the divine love between believers and God
- Puritan leaders made the institution of marriage one of the basic means through which to control and bring order to their society.
- Thus, adultery was considered the ultimate sin, a moral violation of God's will.
- True Purpose of "To My Dear and Loving Husband"
- Interpretations
- She is being honest and truly loves her husband
- She is really speaking about religion and her love of God
- She is making fun of women (satire) and finds the typical behavior of Puritan females ridiculous
- She is being honest and truly loves her husband
- POETIC DEVICES:
- rhyme scheme
- iambic pentameter
- alliteration
- rhyme scheme
- True Purpose of "Young Goodman Brown"
- SHORT STORY
- Allegory
- Definition: a form of extended metaphor, in which objects, persons, and actions in a narrative, are equated with the meanings that lie outside the narrative itself. The underlying meaning has moral, social, religious, or political significance, and characters are often personifications of abstract ideas as charity, greed, or envy.
Thus an allegory is a story with two meanings, a literal meaning and a symbolic meaning.
- Names:
- Young Goodman Brown
- Goodman—Good Man
- Brown--commoner
- Brown's youth suggests that he is an uncorrupted and innocent young man
- Brown has a personal "faith" in goodness of humanity
- Tilting head back shows the reservation he feels
- Goodman—Good Man
- Faith
- Goodness found in a young wife
- Goodness found in a young wife
- Place:
- Forest
- Subconscious of the mind
- Must travel far away from innocence/purity/goodness to do evil
- The scene of the witch meeting with the flaming altars is an allegory for Brown's baptism into the evil world that surrounds him.
- The farther we walk into the forest, the more caught up in evil we become. Before long, we don't even realize how we ended up so far from innocence and purity.
- We have the choice to turn back to faith all along, but as Puritans believed, we don't because we are instinctively evil.
- Subconscious of the mind
- Objects:
- Maple Stick
- Rots from inside out
- As humans, everything inside of us is evil; thus, it comes out when we act upon it.
- Rots from inside out
- marriage was a civil union, a contract, not a sacred rite
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