Thursday, September 27, 2018

Due Friday, October 2nd - Read "Pride & Prejudice" by Jane Austen - Chapters XXVII-XXXIII (Pages 103-128)

1) Read Pride & Prejudice by Jane Austen - Chapters XXVII-XXXIII  (Pages 103-128)

2) Please respond to the text. Use direct examples from the novel, but make connections to the things we talked about today dealing with our choices in life partners. Also, please ask me questions. Let me know what you would like to discuss. What is confusing? What would you like to discuss further?



"Are you playing hard to get, you elegant female?"


"I am declining your offer with a decapitation!"



"I married him...and all I got was this hat."



"And a marriage bed, my dear!  Do not forget that!"



"Yes... how could I forget that...I really am happy....so.....so.....happy...."


Due Monday, October 1 - Petrarchan Sonnets

Overview:  The sonnet, as a poetic genre, began in Italy in the thirteenth century, and, under the later influence of the Italian poet Petrarch, became internationally popular. Petrarch established the basic form of the so-called Petrarchan sonnet Also called Italian sonnet: 14 lines divided into two clear parts, an opening octet (8 lines) and a closing sestet (6 lines) with a fixed rhyme scheme (abbaabba cdecde). Often the octet will pose a problem or paradox which the sestet will resolve. Petrarch also established the convention of the sonnet sequence as a series of love poems written by an adoring lover to an unattainable and unapproachable lady of unsurpassed beauty. The Petrarchan sonnet convention, in other words, established, not merely the form of the poem, but also the subject matter.


"Sonnet 292" from the Canzoniere
translated by Anthony Mortimer 


The eyes I spoke of once in words that burn,
the arms and hands and feet and lovely face
that took me from myself for such a space
of time and marked me out from other men;
the waving hair of unmixed gold that shone,
the smile that flashed with the angelic rays
that used to make this earth a paradise,
are now a little dust, all feeling gone;
and yet I live, grief and disdain to me,
left where the light I cherished never shows,
in fragile bark on the tempestuous sea.
Here let my loving song come to a close;
the vein of my accustomed art is dry,
and this, my lyre, turned at last to tears.



The eyes I spoke of with such warmth,
The arms and hands and feet and face
Which took me away from myself
And marked me out from other people;
The waving hair of pure shining gold,
And the flash of her angelic smile,
Which used to make a paradise on earth,
Are a little dust, that feels nothing.
And yet I live, for which I grieve and despise myself,
Left without the light I loved so much,
In a great storm on an unprotected raft.
Here let there be an end to my loving song:
The vein of my accustomed invention has run dry,
And my lyre is turned to tears.



Gli occhi di ch'io parlai sì caldamente,
et le braccia et le mani e i piedi e 'l viso,
che m'avean sì­ da me stesso diviso,
et fatto singular da l'altra gente;
le crespe chiome d'òr puro lucente
'l lampeggiar de l'angelico riso,
che solean fare in terra un paradiso,
poca polvere son, che nulla sente.
Et io pur vivo, onde mi doglio e sdegno,
rimaso senza 'l lume ch'amai tanto,
in gran fortuna e 'n disarmato legno.
Or sia qui fine al mio amoroso canto:
secca è la vena de l'usato ingegno,
et la cetera mia rivolta in pianto.




Directions:  Please choose a sonnet by Petrarch (see link below).  Cut and paste it into your post, and analyze it using the terminology we learned in class (see "The Poetry Cheet Sheet" below).  Most importantly, include a detailed personal analysis of the poem in your post. 



The Poetry Cheat Sheet 


Tone: This is the attitude of the speaker of the poem. You always have to consider the tone of the speaker even if you’re not specifically asked to analyze it. Tone relates to many of elements below. It’s a “big-picture” or “umbrella” concept. (You should have a “bank” of words in mind: angry, happy, carefree, bitter, sympathetic, sad, nostalgic, ironic, satirical, etc.)

Repetition: Poets often rely on repetition. This can be words, phrases, sounds, images, ideas. If a poet repeats something, it takes on more meaning.

Diction: This refers to words. What words does the poet use? Does he repeat any specific words? What connotation do the words have (positive, negative)?

Syntax/Structure: Do the sentences within the poem or stanzas have a recognizable structure? Does the structure or pattern change at a specific moment?

Imagery (sensory details): This refers to the images of the poem, especially those that appeal to many senses (sight, sound, taste, touch, smell).

Sounds: Sound is often conveyed in poetry. Look for rhyme and repetition, and things such as alliteration, consonance, and assonance (which are repetitions of specific types of sound).

Metaphors/Similes: Comparisons are often used to support imagery, but they can also be used to anchor a poem, to convey a poem’s main message. Any time a poet compares something to something else, you should take note of it.

Irony: This is HUGE in poetry. If something is said or happens that is unexpected, it’s ironic. If it’s sarcastic or satirical, it’s ironic. If you can recognize irony, you’re golden.

Allusion: This is a literary or historical reference. It is not as common on the AP exam, but you should know what it is and how it works.

Rhythm/Rhyme: This is covered with other elements above. This just refers to the recognizable pattern of a poem that gives it a sense of rhythm and flow.

Also:  Sestet (six line stanza), Octet (eight line stanza), Quatrain (four line stanza), couplet (two line stanza)

Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Blog and Class Participation Rubric & Progress Reports

Attention: Progress reports will be coming out October 1st, so be sure to revisit any blogs you need to refine or compose. I will be posting your grades to Aspen.

Please see me if you need any assistance or have any questions. Below is the rubric I gave you the first day of class for your convenience.

Mr. P.

Blog and Class Participation Criteria 


Directions: This is your space to read and discuss ideas about the material we read in class. You will notice that these blog responses are intensive, but it will allow you to speak your mind and obtain immediate feedback. These homework assignments will count substantially, and the rubric below will help guide you. I will show some examples in class, and you are always free to discuss your work with me in class or after school.


Grading: On Aspen, you will find an assessment labeled “Blog and Class Participation.” Every two weeks, I will update your grade according to the rubric below. It may change as the term progresses. The key is to complete your work on a regular basis and participate in class. At the end of each term, you will receive a formal response to your work with written feedback.


A range has the following qualities:
  • All work is complete and on-time 
  • Contributes to class discussion daily; a leader 
  • Well-written work 
  • Personal voice is present 
  • Thoughtful, meaningful, and there is always evidence that the student read the text closely 
  • Responses do not merely agree but challenge fellow students to think critically 
  • At least 3-4 well chosen, nice framed, direct quotations from a text 
  • Responds to fellow classmates so that a dialogue ensues 
  • Takes risks 
  • Returns to add comments to have a conversation 


B range may exhibit some of the above qualities, BUT:
  • Work is completed, but late on occasion 
  • Contributes to class discussion regularly, but not every class 
  • Too formal, little personal engagement 
  • 1-2 direct quotations; may not be well chosen or framed 
  • A thinner response than the A range 
  • A super long technical response that could be more concise 


C range may exhibit some of the above qualities, BUT:
  • Some blogs are missing, or incomplete 
  • Contributes to class discussion on occasion 
  • Not aware of audience; single post and does not return to discussion 
  • Responds to the prompt in a general manner 
  • Repeats what someone else wrote, as the student obviously did not read through the other responses 
  • There is a voice, but little evidence that the student read closely 
  • There are no direct quotations; there are some concrete examples 

D and F range may exhibit some of the above qualities, BUT:
  • Many blogs missing on a regular basis 
  • Late blogs completed, but only after many are missing; completed in bunches after the fact 
  • Rarely contributes to class discussion and/or often late or absent 
  • Late responses that could be high quality but only completed to avoid a zero 
  • A few sentences and comments, but little to no analysis 
  • Does not return to discussion 
  • Little engagement 
  • Is openly cruel to a classmate 
  • Knowingly inappropriate

Monday, September 24, 2018

Due Thursday - Read "Pride & Prejudice" by Jane Austen - Chapters XVII - XXIII (Pages 58-91) - End of Vol. I

1)  Read Pride & Prejudice by Jane Austen - Chapters XVII-XXIII (Pages 58-91) - End of Vol. I
2)  Please respond to the text.  Use 2-3 direct examples from the novel, and make predictions.  Where do you see the novel going from here?  What clues do you see Austen leaving for us to ponder?  Also, please ask me questions.  Let me know what you would like to discuss.  What is confusing?  What would you like to discuss further?



"Got Bingley?"


"Not if I can help it!"



"May I have the next dance...and your hand in marriage, Cousin Elizabeth?"


"I would rather marry a Wookie, sir!"


AAAARRRRHHHH!  AAARRH! 
(Translation:  "Hey, babycakes!  Wassup!")

Due Wednesday - "First Hour" by Sharon Olds - How do we define self? Why novels?

Overview:  People did not look fondly on the "novel."  Many associated it with women, and therefore concluded it would have no intellectual value.  Many in the literary world denounced novels as a "young woman's journal."  Ironically, men would dominate the use of the genre and women would be blocked out.  Pioneers like Jane Austen and the Bronte sisters would be forced to be anonymous or use men's names in order to publish.

Why is the novel so important?

In my humble opinion, novels teach us that we are not alone.  Through narration we see into the minds of other people.  Authors must have great empathy; setting their views aside in order to understand the characters they create.  Their characters will represent real people.

Jane Austen not only pushed the boundaries of how society views women, but also men in her novels.  This conversation connects to how we define "self."  It is not something born in isolation.  Self is defined from infancy through the context we are born into.  There is no clean slate.  Or is there?  Sharon Olds investigates this idea in her poem "First Hour."


Directions:  Read the following poem by Sharon Olds, and briefly respond to her complicated notion of self.  Please use direct lines from the poem in order to explain how she made you feel about the idea of self.




First Hour
Sharon Olds

That hour, I was most myself. I had shrugged
my mother slowly off, I lay there
taking my first breaths, as if
the air of the room was blowing me
like a bubble. All I had to do
was go out along the line of my gaze and back,
feeling gravity, silk, the
pressure of the air a caress, smelling on
myself her creamy blood. The air
was softly touching my skin and mouth,
entering me and drawing forth the little
sighs I did not know as mine.
I was not afraid. I lay in the quiet
and looked, and did the wordless thought,
my mind was getting its oxygen
direct, the rich mix by mouth.
I hated no one. I gazed and gazed,
and everything was interesting, I was
free, not yet in love, I did not
belong to anyone, I had drunk
no milk yet—no one had
my heart. I was not very human. I did not
know there was anyone else. I lay
like a god, for an hour, then they came for me
and took me to my mother.

Thursday, September 20, 2018

The Global Goals for Sustainable Development


Overview:  This agenda is a plan of action for people, planet and prosperity. It also seeks to strengthen universal peace in larger freedom. We recognize that eradicating poverty in all its forms and dimensions, including extreme poverty, is the greatest global challenge and an indispensable requirement for sustainable development. All countries and all stakeholders, acting in collaborative partnership, will implement this plan. We are resolved to free the human race from the tyranny of poverty and want and to heal and secure our planet. We are determined to take the bold and transformative steps which are urgently needed to shift the world onto a sustainable and resilient path. As we embark on this collective journey, we pledge that no one will be left behind. The 17 Sustainable Development Goals and 169 targets which we are announcing today demonstrate the scale and ambition of this new universal Agenda. They seek to build on the Millennium Development Goals and complete what these did not achieve. They seek to realize the human rights of all and to achieve gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls. They are integrated and indivisible and balance the three dimensions of sustainable development: the economic, social and environmental.

Directions:  Please visit The Global Goals for Sustainable Development website below.  Find 1-2 goals you would like to explore this year.  Explain why your choices would be important to you.  How do you see this playing out in the literature we read?






Also, Check out Global Goals Week at:  http://globalgoalsweek.org/



Tuesday, September 18, 2018

Pride & Prejudice - Chs. X-XVI (pages 31-58).

Directions:  Please read chapters X-XVI (pages 31-58) and respond to the reading.  What would you like to discuss?  Ask me questions.  Think about the new characters that have been introduced.  Use 2-3 direct quotations in your responses.  Engage with the text.  Engage with each other.



Darcy says, "You looking at me and my fine eyes?"




      Lizzy says, "Fine eyes indeed!"

Sunday, September 16, 2018

Exploring the Role of Gender: Advice To The Newly Married Lady by Samuel K. Jennings (1808)


Overview:  We have read Chapters I – X, Book I of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.  Before we proceed, read the following piece by Samuel K. Jennings (1771–1854).  He was the first president of Asbury College, a medical doctor, and Methodist preacher. “Advice to the Newly Married Lady” was written as part of a compilation from the volume The Married Lady’s Companion, Or Poor Man’s Friend which was meant to provide medical advice for poor women in rural areas without access to a doctor. Maintaining a successful relationship with a woman’s husband made up a significant portion of the series alongside knowledge of reproduction and childcare. 


Directions:  Think about the following questions as you read through this excerpt, and comment on the blog: How have the roles of women and men changed over time? How have we defined the roles of men and women?  How have things stayed the same?  Use direct examples from your experience, media, literature, etc.


"ADVICE TO THE NEWLY MARRIED LADY"
by Samuel K. Jennings (1808)

INTRODUCTION

Madam,

You have happily allied yourself to the man for whom you leave your father’s house, for whom you cheerfully forsake all the world besides. With him, as your protector and bosom friend, you promise yourself many endearing pleasures. You perceive that “Innocence, candor, sincerity, heroism and piety, express themselves with grace ineffable in every attitude, in every feature of the man you love.” You are therefore highly concerned how you may secure an equal share, and a permanent continuance of his affection and esteem. On this point turns your future happiness or misery. Mutual love and tenderness properly preserved, secures to you the greatest earthly blessing. In proportion to the want or loss of these, you are miserable for life.

Although this consideration very much concerns your husband as well as yourself, yet I must be permitted to assure you, that you are most deeply interested. His engagements as a man, will necessarily keep up his attention. He will have frequent occasion to mix with agreeable and interesting company. His acquaintance will be extended, his amusements multiplied. He of course will have an asylum, should home become tiresome or disagreeable. But your house is your only refuge, your husband your only companion. Should he abandon you, solitude, anxiety and tears, must be your unhappy lot. You cannot fly for amusement to the race ground, to the chase, to the card table, or to the tavern. You cannot look out for a gallant, to whom you may impart your slighted love. You must either languish in bitterness, or learn to compose your feelings, by stoical indifference.

PROPER CONDUCT OF THE WIFE TOWARDS HER HUSBAND

1. As it is your great wish and interest to enjoy much of your husband’s company and conversation, it will be important to acquaint yourself with his temper, his inclination, and his manner, that you may render your house, your person and your disposition quite agreeable to him. By observing with accuracy, and guarding your words and actions with prudence, you may quickly succeed according to your wishes.

2. Here perhaps you ask, why so much pains necessary on my part?... But under present circumstances, it is your interest to adapt yourself to your husband, whatever may be his peculiarities. Again, nature has made man the stronger, the consent of mankind has given him superiority over his wife, his inclination is, to claim his natural and acquired rights…

3. In obedience then to this precept of the gospel [“Wives submit yourselves unto your own husbands, as unto the Lord”], to the laws of custom and of nature, you ought to cultivate a cheerful and happy submission.

WIFE OUGHT NOT TO APPEAR IN THE HUSBAND’S BUSINESS…

Men and women appear to best advantage each in their own proper station… If it were to save appearances only, the husband at least to seem to be the head. And therefore if you are determined to rule him, adopt the following plan. “When any article of property is to be bought or sold, take him aside, teach him the price to be given or received, point out the kind of payment, the time to be paid, &c. &c. let the whole business be properly adjusted, and then let the poor fellow go forward and seem to act like a man.”

THE SURE WAY OF HAPPINESS IN THE MARRIED STATE

The great point for securing happiness in the married state, is, to be mutually accommodating. The parties should look over one another’s faults, and contemplate one another’s excellencies. We all have defects, and it is much better to dwell on your own faults, than on those of your husband.

ONE WORD IN FAVOUR OF ECONOMY

Strict adherence to the conduct recommended in the former chapters, is highly important. But I must inform you, that good economy and judicious8 house-wifery must also be added, or your happiness can by no means be complete. It affords a dismal prospect to a man who wishes to make a living, to find a double and triple quantity of every article of family consumption necessary to meet his wife’s regulations and management.


Sunday, September 2, 2018

Pride and Prejudice . . . How Will These Themes Apply to Us?

Overview: How word you define the words "pride" and "prejudice." What comes to mind when you hear those words outside the context of the title of Austen's novel? How do these words shape who we are as people?  How does it tie into culture?

Directions:  Read the Webster definitions of pride and prejudice below.  View the TED Talk, "The Danger of the Single Story."  In a blog response, share instances in your life where you exhibited positive and negative aspects of pride and prejudice.  Also, how do you see this playing out in the novel?  Use direct examples from the definitions and the TED Talk in your responses.  Engage with each other. Use the text. Be genuine and authentic. Think about the value of words by being concise. Think about your audience. Next, peruse my global blog.  Please comment on something you found interesting and would like to ask me for more information. Also, revisit the blog. Read and respond to your fellow classmates. Get a dialogue going. Challenge each other. Be bold. Be brilliant.


Defining Pride and Prejudice

Webster defines "pride" as:

a feeling or deep pleasure or satisfaction derived from one's own achievements, the achievements of those with whom one is closely associated, or from qualities or possessions that are widely admired. synonyms: pleasure, joy, delight, gratification, fulfillment, satisfaction, a sense of achievement...

It also defines it as follows:

the quality of having an excessively high opinion of oneself or one's importance. "the sin of pride" synonyms: arrogance, vanity, self-importance, hubris, conceit, conceitedness, self-love, self-adulation, self-admiration, narcissism, egotism, superciliousness, haughtiness, snobbery, snobbishness...



Webster defines "prejudice" as:

preconceived opinion that is not based on reason or actual experience. synonyms: preconceived idea, preconception, prejudgment...

It is also defined as follows:

dislike, hostility, or unjust behavior deriving from unfounded opinions...

Add another layer, and it is defined as:

accusations of racial prejudice. synonyms: bigotry, bias, partisanship, partiality, intolerance, discrimination, unfairness, inequality...



"The Danger of a Single Story"
by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Culture. The word originated with the definition"to cultivate land," and evolved into a "cultivation of the mind." Today the word is ambiguous, referring to our attachment to a place, traditions, and beliefs. It also has ominously been used to discuss an "otherness" through stereotypes.

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie shares her experiences with the notion of culture in "The Danger of a Single Story" in an important TED Talk that will explain the importance of global intelligence.






"Mr. P. Goes Global"
by Eric Pellerin



Due Thursday, June 13th - All I Really Needed to Know I Learned in Mr. Pellerin's Survey of British Literature Class.

Overview :  Go back to our first blog, and walk through the 2018-2019 school year.  Revisit the books we read and our class responses.  Look...