Day 42 -Standard– Adj/Adv,Poetic Form,Poetry packet, and Romeo and Juliet Intro
Jan 19, 2016
Day 42 -Standard– Adj/Adv,Poetic Form,Poetry packet, and Romeo and Juliet Intro
Objectives1. Identify and Understand how adjectives and adverbs enhance a
sentence.
• 2. Understand the role sound plays in poetry.
Homework:
Study Literary terms- They will appear on your vocab quiz
Bring Romeo and Juliet to class on Monday
Warm Up•Listen to and read the poem “Do not go gentle into that good night” by Dylan Thomas.•Fill out a SOAPSTone analysis of the poem.•Answer this question: How does sound play a role in the understanding of this poem?
•https://youtu.be/fR8rJXZo6v8
GRAMMAR TIME!Take notes- Everything is important!
Adjectives Activity
Take out a piece of paper and remove everything else from your desk.
You will have 30 seconds to write down as many adjectives to describe the picture on the following slide.
When the alarm rings, put down your pen/pencil. No words will be counted after the 30 seconds have past.
When you are ready, put your head down on the desk. I will tell you to look at the screen.
Adjectives Activity
INDEPENDENT PRACTICE
Get a worksheet and complete the answers using your notes
1. What is an adjective? describes a noun or pronoun
2. What does an adjective do? adds description /describes
3. What is an adverb? modifies a verb, adjective, or other adverb
4. What does an adverb do? describes or modifies
5. What does the word "modify" mean? change in some way /describe
6. How can we recognize adverbs? usually they end with an -ly
6. What do we usually use to modify a subject? Use an adjective
7. What do we usually use to modify a verb? Use an adverb
8. Correctly underline the adverb in this sentence.
9. What are three adverbs that are used in verb phrases? No, not, never, usually, always
Quiz Time!
Adj/Adv quiz-• Log into google
Poetry Packet
•Take a poetry packet and write your name at the top. You will be using this for the duration of our poetry unit.•Make sure you write your answers on the standards sheet as well as the packet.•Each week you will need to follow the guidelines.
Poetry -> Sound•Activity Instructions: Part One
•Copy the definitions of the literary terms.•Read the poem silently. Look for examples of the sound devices.•Once you have finished reading, check for understanding by discussing the poem. Do you understand it? • Find examples of alliteration, assonance, consonance, and onomatopoeia.
Sound in Poetry- Notes
POETRY -> SOUNDTerms: Rhythm: the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in each line.
Rhyme: the musical quality of a poem. Correspondence of sound between words.
Internal Rhyme: rhyme that occurs within the lines of a poem.
End Rhyme: rhyme that occurs at the end of lines.Approximate Rhyme: rhyme that uses similar but not exact sounds.
Ex. Consonant sounds: Mind - Sign
POETRY -> SOUNDMeter: a regular pattern of rhythm.
Rhyme Scheme: a regular pattern of rhyme.
Scansion: charting meter in a poem.
METERTo identify a poem’s meter, you have to break each line into smaller units called feet. A foot consists of one stressed syllable and one or two unstressed ones. Combine the type of feet and number of feet from the left to describe a poem’s meter.
Shakespeare is famous for using Iambic Pentameter
PAIR ACTIVITY: CHART THE METER OF THE POEM
A plague on both your houses…
What is the first thing that comes to mind when you think of William Shakespeare, or Romeo and Juliet?
…old and boring …tragic love story…hard to understand …stuck up
..two feuding families …romance…Romeo, wherefore art thou
Romeo?….play with old costumes …who? Huh?
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE 1564-1616Humble Beginnings: born in
Stratford-upon-AvonKnown as “the Bard”Attended Stratford Grammar School
until he was 14 Then he married Anne Hathaway and
entered the “lost years”.
Wrote about 37 plays and 154 sonnets
Shakespeare’s sonnets all featured a male speaker and focused on the theme of love. Other common themes: time, death, and poetry itself.
So about this Shakespeare..
• William Shakespeare was an unknown man from Stratford on Avon, who ended up becoming a famous playwright in London
• When he was 18 he married 26 year old Anne Hathaway, their daughter Susanna was born 6th months later. They also had twins, Judith and Hamnet, but he died at age 11
• He spent much of his life in London, as an actor and author, at the Globe theater, and when he died he left his wife the 2nd best bed in his will
A way with words• Shakespeare added over 2,000 words to the
English language in his plays, if he needed a new word, he made one up, you may recognize…
Eyeball, dwindle, watchdog, gloomy, hobnob, swagger, rant, moonbeam, fashionable
• There are also expressions he coined that are very common today, like “a heart of gold,” “wild goose chase,” “vanish into thin air,” “good riddance,” “break the ice,” “a laughing stock,” “clothes make the man,” “dead as a doornail”
• He also wrote some pretty good insults
MORE ABOUT SHAKESPEARE!Left his family to arrive in London and
joined the theater company, Lord Chamberlain’s Men.
Earned his money by doing the following:1.) Part owner of the Globe Theater2.) An Actor3.) A Playwright
Generally wrote 3 types of plays:1.) Tragedy- Ex. Romeo & Juliet2.) Comedy- Ex. The Taming of the Shrew3.) Historical- Ex. Henry VIII
• Elizabethan Era• The Renaissance• Actors were men only
o Men even played female roles!
• Plays were one of the main source of entertainment
THE TIME PERIOD
Elizabethan Theater…all the world’s a stage
• In Shakespeare’s time, theaters were on the south side of London, along with bearbaiting, taverns, and some very friendly women
• Theaters were sometimes closed to try to stop the threat of plague, or because they were “immoral”
• All of the actors were men, it was illegal for women to be onstage…so Juliet was being played by a teenage boy in a dress…there’s a reason Shakespeare’s plays have lots of talking, but not too much kissing onstage
THE GLOBE THEATER Roofless= Open Air No Artificial Lighting
Plays were performed in the afternoon to take advantage of the sunlight.
Plays were written/produced for the general audience Courtyard surrounded by 3 levels of galleries Spectators:
Wealthy- got benches “Groundlings”- poorer people stood and watched from the ground (the pit) All except for the wealthy were uneducated/ poor
Burned down during a production of Henry VIII in 1613. Rebuilt the following year.
• You could get into the Globe theater for a penny, and stand during the whole play, or pay a bit more for a seat, most stood, and were called “groundlings”
• Food was sold, and if the play wasn’t good or exciting, the audience would heckle or throw things at the actors
THE GLOBE THEATERDifferences to today’s theater productions:
No Scenery Settings were all referenced through dialogue Elaborate Costumes Plenty of props Fast-paced productions Only MALE actors would perform
SHAKESPEARE’S 5 PART STORYTELLING PATTERN:
Act I: Exposition
Establishes setting, characters, conflict, and background
Act II: Rising Action
A series of complications
Act III: Crisis/Turning Point
A series of complications
Act IV: Falling ActionResults of the turning point; characters locked into deeper disaster
Act V: Climax/Resolution/DenouementDeath of the main characters and then the loose parts of the plot are tied up
Comedy and Tragedy
Elements of a tragedy
•Must have a tragic hero/heroine
•Ends in the death of many of the main characters
Romeo and Juliet begins as a comedy but ends as a tragedy
Elements of a comedy
The shift from comedy to tragedy is what sets Romeo and Juliet apart from the rest of Shakespeare’s plays
•A struggle of young lovers to overcome difficulty that is often presented by elders
•Separation and unification
•Heightened tensions, often within a family
TRAGIC HEROQualities of a Tragic Hero:
Possesses high importance or rankExhibits extraordinary talentsDisplays a tragic flaw- an error in judgment or a defect in character that leads to their downfall
Faces downfall with courage and dignity
A PAIR OF STAR CROSSED LOVERS…
“My only love sprung from my only hate! Too
early seen unknown , and known too late!” ~ Juliet; Act I, Scene V
Romeo and Juliet Sources
• Guess what? Shakespeare didn’t come up with the story of Romeo and Juliet all on his own!
• He borrowed ideas and characters from other stories that already existed, especially a poem in 1562 by Arthur Brooke called The Tragical History of Romeus and Juliet
• The poem is probably Shakespeare’s main source, but the poem is based on several different Italian stories
• There’s also a story by Ovid, an ancient Roman writer, called Pyramus and Thisbe, in which two lovers from rival families plan to meet in secret, but through a misunderstanding (who hasn’t thought their girlfriend was devoured by a lion?) end up killing themselves
• Shakespeare was definitely aware of the story, because he used a version of it in one of his plays
• So the moral is, you don’t need the most original idea, just to have the best, most dramatic version of it
• And just as Shakespeare borrowed ideas to come up with Romeo and Juliet, people have borrowed the play’s ideas to create new entertainment
• A well-known example is West Side Story, a musical with two different gangs replacing the feuding families
Other examples: • Romeo + Juliet (Baz Luherman’s update)• “Love Story” (Taylor Swift)• Pretty much any story with lovers from two
different worlds (yes, Twilight), • Gnomeo and Juliet• Shakespeare in Love• Warm Bodies
LITERARY TERMS TO LOOK FOR...1.) Puns- a humorous play on words
Romeo – “Not I, believe me. You have dancing shoes / With nimble soles; I have a soul of lead…” (Act I Sc. 4)
2.) Allusions- a reference to a well-known work of art, music, literature, or history“At lovers’ perjuries, they say Jove laughs.” (Act II, Sc. 2
Jove is another name for Jupiter, the Roman King of the Gods.
3.) Metaphor- A direct comparison between two unalike things. Romeo- “But soft! What light through yonder window breaks?/ It is the east, and Juliet is the sun.” (Act II scene 2)
4.) Oxymorons- Two juxtaposed words have opposing/ very diverse meaningsJuliet – “Beautiful tyrant! fiend angelical!” (Act III Sc.2)
5.) Personification- Occurs when an inanimate object or concept is given the qualities of a person or animal.Juliet— “For thou wilt lie upon the wings of night / Whiter than new snow on a raven’s back. / Come, gentle night, come, loving, black-brow’d night” (Act III Sc. 2)
6.) Paradox- a statement that seems to contradict itself with two elements that are incompatible Juliet – “O serpent heart, hid with a flowering face!” (Act III Sc. 2)
7.) Foreshadowing- a reference to something that will happen later in the story. Juliet – “Give me my Romeo; and, when he shall die,Take him and cut him out in little stars,And he will make the face of heaven so fineThat all the world will be in love with nightAnd pay no worship to the garish sun.” (Act III Sc. 2)
3 KEY THEMES1.) Light and Dark
Look for: References to “light” words ex. “the sun” and references to “dark” words ex. “night” and “gloom”
2.) TimeLook for: References to the passage of time or if things seem to be rushed
3.) DestinyLook for: Instances where events are blamed on “destiny” or “the stars”
MONTAGUE VS. CAPULET
RomeoLord Montague (his dad)Lady Montague (his mom)Mercutio (friend)Benvolio (cousin)
JulietLord Capulet (her father)Lady Capulet (her mother)Tybalt (cousin)Nurse
SettingThe story is set in the late 1500’s mostly in the town of Verona, Italy. However, there are a few acts set in Mantua, Italy a smaller town just a few miles away.
Interesting…
“Star-crossed lovers” refers to two people who are in love but have conflicting astrological signs. In Shakespeare’s times, people believed the course of their lives was determined by the exact second they were born.
The Italian city of Verona, where Romeo and Juliet lived, receives about 1,000 letters addressed to Juliet every Valentine's Day.
Verona TodayToday, Verona has an incredible amount of graffiti, which is legal, provided that you are writing about your love for someone.
ROMEO AND JULIET - PROLOGUE
Closure 3, 2, 1
•Write three things you learned about poetry today.•Write two examples of sound usage in poems.•Write one question you still have about poetry.