World Literature Thinkers S2

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Susanne

Your Final Interpretation 29 Replies

Started by Susanne in Uncategorized. Last reply by Raleigh Apr. 29, 2009.

Susanne

Our Final Academic Articles 14 Replies

Started by Susanne in Uncategorized. Last reply by Walker Mar. 31, 2009.

Susanne

Desdemona 58 Replies

Started by Susanne in Uncategorized. Last reply by Don Jaconia Mar. 11, 2009.

Members

  • Carole Hall
  • Emily Goose
  • Britnae
  • Dr. Jack Snow
  • sburton
  • nhurst
  • Susanne
  • Nate88H
  • Laura Nicosia
  • Walker
  • Landon Sachs
  • Joe Renaud
  • Cflemer
  • Raleigh
  • Jamie
  • Jennifer Pallotta
 

How we will work through Othello together

Othello has been studied for centuries. We are about to join this long literary history with our own ideas about Shakespeare's masterpiece.

1. Join and Participate in a Character Forum: You are responsible for posting important quotes said by or said about your character as well as reactions to quotes posted by others. By the end of the play, you must post a total of 5 new quotes (with correct citations) and 10 thoughtful reactions (a direct reference to the posting plus a well-explained new idea you have) to others' postings.
Final Posting due Friday: In one sentence, state what you believe your character's superobjective is. Then comment on another member's superobjective statement.

2. Journal about the Play and Share these Thoughts: On certain nights, you will have a blog topic that asks you to think about the play. On other nights, you will explore and react to classmates' blogs. In the end, you will have created together a web of thinking.

3. Join the Conversation: Write an academic journal article about the character you have followed throughout the play. Here are the guidelines.
** Please post your first draft on your blog (titled clearly so we know it is your draft). Make sure you start your post with 2 specific questions you would like feedback on.

4. Publish Your Article: When you have your final academic article all done, please post it to the "Academic Articles" forum to the left. Here we will be able to read, learn from, and enjoy everyone's thoughts and insights. (Don't forget to also upload your article to TurnItIn!)

Hearing Authors Think ...

Latest Activity

Laura Nicosia is now a member of World Literature Thinkers S2
May 20, 2009
1. The white man’s culture expanded and influenced both Okonkwo's identity and his village’s culture. The feelings of isolation culminated in Okonkwo's suicide. As Okonkwo hung in his backyard dangling, no one from his tribe would take him down, and…
May 5, 2009
Style ----- Content 1. Point of view: 3rd person omniscient (singularly focused at each moment) In the last chapter, it seems to be from the Direct commissioner's point of view. It is limited from the Commissioner; this is symbolic that thethings t…
May 1, 2009
Discussion Notes: Point of View - Third person omniscient (pg. 61) Sees emotions of other people, just not everybody all the time. There is more focus on certain characters, depending on the section of the book. Singularly focused at each moment. F…
May 1, 2009
Carole Hall added a blog post
stylecontent point of view -----------3rd person omniscent pg 61, "Nwoye knew that Ikemefuna had been killed" singularly focused in each chapter on certain characters @ different times Last Chapter-District Commisioner POV-not africans --ironic--see…
May 1, 2009
I think that Okonkwo relates to Oedipus in that they both refused to change with the times. Both characters were essentially trapped in a time where they were both looked at as immortal gods. However, one mistake managed to ruin both characters live…
May 1, 2009
1. How do our larger cultures contribute to our identities or even our isolations? Use Things Fall Apart, both the title itself and the work as a whole, as your examples. (You will be turning in this answer individually for me to read.) Cultures inf…
May 1, 2009
Okonkwo was a stong person who thought that he should be in control of all of his destiny, and fought hard for that. He did not want to be like his father, who he thought was weak, at all costs. However, there are echoes of Oedipus Rex in here, beca…
April 30, 2009

Blog Posts

Carole Hall

Things Fall Apart Notes

style<-->content
point of view -----------3rd person omniscent pg 61, "Nwoye knew that Ikemefuna had been killed"
singularly focused in each chapter on certain characters @ different times
Last Chapter-District Commisioner POV-not africans --ironic--see through the eyes of the person not from the culture
Nigeria-- Final Chapter: Missionary
Nigerians: Black-Ibo beliefs vs White Men: Christians
We would naturally relate to missionaries but we dont!!!!!!!
Sympathy lies with the Nigerian peopl… Continue

Posted by Carole Hall on May 1, 2009 at 11:18am

sburton

How do our larger cultures contribute to our identities or even our isolations?

Once the white man came to Okonkwo's village, Okonkwo soon became isolated from the rest of his tribe. Okonkwo was a firm believer in killing all of the white men (pg 158), while the rest of the tribe was willing to compromise with the missionaries. The reason for this had to do with the idea that Okonkwo could not let go of his past (when he was viewed as a hero), and refused to let his culture be overrun by another. This brings up the idea that larger cultures (in this case, the white man's cu… Continue

Posted by sburton on May 1, 2009 at 10:00am

Britnae

Part Three

1. Think about what happened when the white man came. Then reread “The Second Coming.” Go to your blog. With the poem and your thoughts on the white man in mind, answer our inquiry frame: how do our larger cultures contribute to our identities or even our isolations? Use Things Fall Apart, both the title itself and the work as a whole, as your examples. (You will be turning in this answer individually for me to read.)

Let me start slowly with this. It's a big question. When the white man came,… Continue

Posted by Britnae on April 30, 2009 at 9:24pm

Act III: The Climax

The Temptation Scene in Relay
Group #1: 2 people -- Landon and Joe
III.iii.90-192 (“Excellent Wretch” through “Away at once with love or jealousy!”) Iago starts to poison Othello's mind and goes further in his campaign to make Othello doubt Desdemona’s fidelity. Othello begins to believe Iago's hints.
Roles: Othello and Iago
Directions: Emphasize the irony of the words and who is speaking. Cut down some of Othello’s speeches and aggressively cut down Iago’s longer speeches.

Group #2: 2 people -- Walker and Neil
III.iii.193-279 (“I am glad of this” through “I'll not believe't”) Othello begins to believe Iago's hints and is struggling with his belief in his wife's honesty.
Roles: Othello and Iago
Directions: Cut down lines. In the speech beginning at line 228 (from "Ay, there's the point!"), Iago suggests that Desdemona's choice of Othello is unnatural. What are the implications of this? How will the person playing Othello react nonverbally? How does Othello react to Desdemona’s entrance?

Group #3: 5 people -- Jamie, Carlyn, Jonny, Raleigh, and Britnae
III.iii.279-380 (“How now, my dear Othello?” through “sith love breeds such offense”) Othello expresses increasing conviction that Desdemona is betraying him, and the handkerchief is put into play.
Roles: Action Director, Othello, Iago, Desdemona, and Emilia
Directions: Cut down lines. Use the class handkerchief. Since what happens in this scene sets in motion a series of events that result in catastrophe, figure out carefully how Othello rejects the handkerchief, how and why Desdemona lets it fall, and how Emilia reacts when she picks it up. Where does Emilia hold the handkerchief when she sees Iago coming? What motivates her to offer it to him after all? What is her objective, and how will the actor make it clear? How is the handkerchief passed between them -- Iago takes it or Emilia hands it? Speculate about why Othello insists to Iago, “Villain, be sure thou prove my love a whore! / Be sure of it. Give me the ocular proof.” Consider the irony of his demand. How can this be conveyed by the actors?

Group #4: 2 people -- Nate and Emily
III.iii.381-431 (“Nay, stay” through “I’ll tear her all to pieces”) Becoming even bolder, Iago fabricates a story about how Cassio in his sleep revealed his affair with Desdemona.
Roles: Othello and Iago
Directions: Cut down lines. Think about the play on the word "honest," meaning both truthful and sexually faithful or chaste. Decide how to say that word.

Group #5: 3 people -- Carole, Nicholas, and Sean
III.iii.432-480 (“Nay, but be wise” through “I am your own forever”) Iago says he has seen the handkerchief in Cassio’s hand, Othello’s conviction becomes firm, and Othello and Iago pledge their fidelity to each other.
Roles: Action Director, Othello, and Iago
Directions: Cut down lines. Work out how to kneel and rise. What props will you use?

Act IV: The Falling Action

Othello’s Fall: IV.i.1-208

In your group, answer your assigned question. Then, prepare a 2-minute or less verbal answer to share with the class – that is, narrow down your group’s answer to the most important essence the whole class needs to know. You have 8 minutes!

1. Define epilepsy. Trace its build-up in and effects on Othello in lines 1-64 (through “and many a civil monster”).

2. How is Iago able to make Othello believe that Cassio is speaking of Desdemona in lines 93-143 (“Now I will question” through “Before me! Look where she comes”)? What would you emphasize, as a director, when you rehearsed the actors?

3. Can you find examples to show how Othello’s once noble and lofty language is sinking to Iago’s bestial level? (Remember your “Iago’s Bestiary” in the close reading group.) What do you make of this change in Shakespeare’s choice of diction for his character?

Act V: The Tragedy Plays Out

Performing Act V

Here are the directions for your final performance!

Act V.doc



 
 

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