e10 nov2 2011
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Wednesday, November 2, 2011
Literature: “The Tell-Tale Heart”
Housekeeping
• Green box– handouts– homework
• Short Story Exam– Wednesday, November 16th– Study Sheet available by next week
The Tell-Tale Heart
After Reading
Briefly: Think about the title again. How does it relate to the story?
• Whose heart does it refer to?• How does it reveal, give a signal, give a clue?
The Tell-Tale Heart - Activity30 minutes - NO DICTIONARIES ALLOWED!
1. Refer to the story to complete the following questions on the handout:
1. Understanding the Words in the Story (Multiple Choice) /5 (p. 144)
2. Check-up (Multiple Choice) /5 (p.142)
We will go over the answers together. Each question is worth half a mark (.5). The marks will not count – they are For Your Information (FYI) only.
The Tell-Tale HeartUnderstanding the Words in the Story (Multiple Choice)
1. acute (adj.)b. sharp
2. conceived (v.)a. imagined
3. thrust (v.)b. poked (peeked, pushed)
4. vexed (v.)b. irritated (annoyed)
5. profound (adj.)b. highly intelligent
The Tell-Tale Heart
6. stifled (v.)a. smothered
7. awe (n.)c. wonder and fear
8. well up (v. – phrasal verb)a. come OR c. rise
9. distracted (v.)c. frightened
10. causeless (adj.)b. unfounded (without foundation, reason or cause)
The Tell-Tale HeartCheck-up (Multiple Choice)
1. c. hearing2. b. nervous3. c. to get rid of an obsession4. a. cleverness5. b. fury6. c. the beating of a human heart7. a. the old man’s room8. a. loud shriek9. c. completely confident10. c. hypocrisy
HomeworkWrite a paragraph using the following words from the story “The Tell-Tale Heart”: distracted (v.) , awe (n.), stifled (v. ), acute (adj.), thrust (v.)
– Your paragraph must – use the correct form (n., v., adj., adv.), and – show the meaning of the word fully
For examples, review how the word is used in the story, look at samples sentences in a dictionary (but do not use them in your paragraph!), or look at the sample sentences on the next two slides.
Sample Sentences
1. distracted (v.) (past tense of distract) (usually takes an object)
Ex: I tried to study but I was distracted by the students at the next table who were talking loudly.Please don’t distract me from what I am doing.I am very distracted right now.
2. awe (n.)Ex: We were so in awe of the amazing sunset that we had to stay
and watch until the sun was completely gone.They were filled with awe . . .I was full of awe . . .
Sample Sentences3. stifled (v. ) (past tense of stifle) (usually takes a direct object)Ex: I was very tired, but I didn’t want to appear rude so I stifled a yawn.
The dictatorship used violence to stifle dissent.Stifle your anger and focus on what you have to do.
4. acute (adj.)Ex: Her eyesight is acute; she can read highway signs when they are still far in
the distance.He had an acute understanding of middle east issues.
5. thrust (v.) (usually takes an object)Ex: He thrust his foot into the aisle, tripping his classmate.
She thrust her unwanted opinions on her friends.They were thrust into a new life without any preparation.
BREAK
“The Tell-Tale Heart” Literary Elements Activity
You will need:
• “The Tell Tale Heart” Story and Questions
• Handout: “Reviewing Story Elements”
• Handout: “Fiction Terms”
“The Tell-Tale Heart” Literary Elements Activity
Group Time: 30 minutes
• You should use this time to
– Help each other understand the story
– Discuss some of the literary elements you are still unsure about
Questions You Still Have• What is the relationship between the narrator and the
old man? What is the location?
A: We don’t have enough information to answer these questions . They may be roomates. They may live in a “boarding house” (Almost like a hotel for single men)
• How did he cut up the old man’s body without leaving a trace of blood?
A: He cut it up in the “tub” (bathtub)
• What type of story?
A: Horror, Suspense.
Groups
A: Chanel, Hossein
B: Grace, Maha
C: Ysaura, Omid
D: Shun, Raana, Dominic
E: Aiko, Estella, Manochehr
Class Review of Literary Elements
Point of View (POV )• First person point of view• The main character is telling us the story• Easy to know the narrator’s thoughts and feelings• He describes himself as clever and smart, etc. – we get to know
his personality through his own description – but it could be biased
• We don’t know what he looks like or any background information about him
• We only know what the narrator wants us to know and we don’t really know if it is accurate
• He’s an unreliable narrator – he is insane
Class Review of Literary Elements
Setting• Midnight, in a house, in the old man’s room
(chamber)• Probably North America in the late 19th or early 20th
century (lantern)• It has to take place late at night, in a place where
two men live in the same building -where the narrator has access to the old man’s room and the two characters see each other every day – the old man has to live alone and be vulnerable
Class Review (Cont’d.)Character - is the narrator round or flat?
Round• personality is complicated – by his description • sometimes he is feeling crazy, sometimes confident, patient, strong, he loved the old man
but he wants to kill him, he doesn’t like the man’s eye – it is difficult to understand his motivations
• he is not straightforward – he wants to kill the man but treated him more kindly leading up to the crime.
• in life, everyone is flat and round; if you see someone you don’t know walking down the street, they are flat to you; if you stopped to talk to them and get to know them, they become round to you. In a short story, it is up to the writer how much we learn about a character; if the writer shows/tells us a lot about a character, we can say the character is round (Shun’s comment)
Flat- he is defined by his obsession
Class Review (Cont’d.)Character - is the narrator dynamic or static?
Dynamic– At the end of the story he admitted his crime because his heart was
beating louder and louder . Did he confess jus to stop the beating? Or because he felt guilty about his crime? Only in the second case could we say he is dynamic.
Static – When he begins telling the story, it has already happened. He is proud
of what he had done, even after he has confessed; he has no regret – so he has not undergone a change in view, belief, or outlook.
Class Review (Cont’d.)Conflict
InternalCharacter vs. his feelings stand his guilt Character vs. his feelings for the old man
External Character vs. Character – narrator vs. old man’s eyeCharacter vs. Character – narrator vs. police
Foreshadowing • The disease had sharpened my senses not dulled (p. 135) – suggests he is crazy • I loved the old man, he had never wronged me . . . . (p. 135) – suggests conflict between them• The first paragraph – his description of his hearing (heard all things in heaven and hell) tells us he is
probably crazy and may do something unreasonable (p. 135)• It is impossible to say how first the idea entered my brain. (p. 135)• My blood ran cold . . . I made up my mind to take the life of the old man . . . (p. 136) (more direct
statement than foreshadowing)
Class Review (Cont’d.)
Outcome • Negative – he was caught• Positive – he felt that he got rid of the sound of the beating
heart
Theme• If someone commits a crime, it will eventually be revealed• A person with a mental illness is not capable of
understanding they are committing a crime or feeling guilty• One can lie to other people but cannot lie to themselves
(Other themes are possible, but they must be based on the details and overall meaning of the story)
Homework
For Wednesday, Nov. 9th - “The Tell-Tale Heart”
1. Re-read the story as many times as you need to in order to fully understand it. Be prepared for in-class questions on this story.
2. Write a paragraph using the following words from the story “The Tell-Tale Heart”: distracted (v.) , awe (n.), stifled (v. ), acute (adj.), thrust (v.). Your paragraph must use the correct form (n., v., adj., adv.), and show the meaning of the word fully.