7. Unctuous: characterized by excessive piousness or moralistic fervor, especially in an affected manner; excessively smooth, suave, or smug.
Friday, May 11, 2012
Thursday, May 10, 2012
GATSBY PROMPTS
Your
final essay in this class will be on The
Great Gatsby. The book is rich with themes and, as such, your essay should
be mature and have depth. As well, your writing should be very high quality.
What
you will be graded on:
1.
Your thesis -Is it clear and specific?
Does it lead your paper?
2.
Address of the prompt - Do you answer the
questions? Is it focused?
3.
Your discussion of the book - Do you show
insight about Gatsby’s themes? Do you
misunderstand things?
4.
Your organization - Is everything logically
placed? Does it flow well?
5.
Your in-text citations -Are they correct
for MLA format?
6.
Your grammar
Prompts:
1.
What makes someone “great”? Discuss how
the attributes or qualities you discuss apply to Jay Gatsby. Then, lead into a
discussion whether or not Gatsby is indeed “great”?
2.
Similar to #1, discuss whether or not the
title of the novel is meant to be taken literally or ironically. How do you
know? What evidence does Fitzgerald give either way?
3.
How does The Great Gatsby symbolically take on the idea of the “American
Dream”? Looking at the possible symbols, what is Fitzgerald’s take/opinion on
the American Dream? Does he believe in it? How do we know?
4.
Discuss, in depth, the positive and
negative effects of chasing after our dreams, using The Great Gatsby as the guide for your discussion. What characters
are affected by chasing after their dreams positively and negatively? What do
we learn from them? Do you have personal experiences to bring into the
discussion as well?
5.
How can you apply Gatsby to yourself? Do you feel its themes are universal? What did you learn from it or what did it
help you understand? As an extension of these questions, why do you think the
novel is considered a classic?
6.
After reading the book, if you have a
question/prompt you want to address, please ask Mr. Durham. If you do not clear
your prompt with Mr. Durham, you will have to redo your essay.
Thursday, May 3, 2012
Film Lit - Book List
Books Adapted into Movies
(You CAN have seen the movie, but CAN’T
have read the book before)
I didn’t include rated R movies or
books that I knew or suspected had a lot of objectionable material. I am still not vouching for all of the books
below. Be discerning and if you run into material that you are not
comfortable with, choose a different book. Also, if one of the “books” below
turns out to be a short story, choose a novel instead and forgive me.
If you want to choose a different
book, you must simply approve it with me
first. DO NOT choose another book without talking to me first. (This is by no means a comprehensive list.)
“Age of Innocence” Edith
Wharton
“All the President’s Men” Carl
Bernstein
“The Boy in the Striped
Pajamas” John Boyne
“The Bridge Over the River
Kwai” Pierre Boulle
“A Civil Action” Jonathan
Harr
“The Color Purple” Alice
Walker
“Dances with Wolves” Michael
Blake
“The Deep End of the Ocean” Jacquelyn
Mitchard
“The Diving Bell and the
Butterfly” Jean-Dominique Bauby
“A Dog Named Skip” Willie
Morris
“Dr. Strangelove” Peter
George
“Shoeless Joe” W.P. Kinsella
“Forrest Gump” Winston Groom
“Flash of Genius” John
Seabrook
“Gone With the Wind” Margaret
Mitchell
“The Great Gatsby” F. Scott
Fitzgerald
“Raisin in the Sun” Lorraine
Hansberry
“Guns of Navarone” Alistair
MacLean
“The Hitchhiker’s Guide to
the Galaxy” Douglas Adams
“I Am Legend” Richard
Matheson
“Little Women” Louisa May
Alcott
“To Kill a Mockingbird” Harper
Lee
“Matchstick Men” Eric Garcia
“Marley and Me” John Grogan
“The Martian Child” David
Gerrold
“Memoirs of a Geisha” Arthur
Golden
“The Namesake” Jhumpa Lahiri
“The Other Boleyn Girl” Philippa
Gregory
“Out of Africa” Isak Dinesen
“The Phantom of the Opera”
Gaston Leroux
“A Little Princess” Frances
Hodgson Burnett
“Psycho” Robert Bloch
“The Secret Life of Bees” Sue
Monk Kidd
“The Soloist” Steve Lopez
“Spartacus” Howard Fast
“What Dreams May Come” Richard Matheson
“The Wizard of Oz” L. Frank
Baum
Jane Austen’s Works
“Sphere” Michael Crichton
Charles Dickens’ Works
“The Count of Monte Cristo”
Alexandre Dumas
“The Three Musketeers”
Alexandre Dumas
“The Man in the Iron Mask”
Alexandre Dumas
“Of Mice and Men” John Steinbeck
“The Time Machine” H.G. Wells
“East of Eden” John Steinbeck
“The Importance of Being
Earnest” Oscar Wilde
“The Maltese Falcon” Dashiell
Hammett
“All the Pretty Horses”
Cormac McCarthy
“Howard’s End” E.M. Forster
“Rabbit-Proof Fence” Doris
Pilkington
“Les Miserables” Victor Hugo
“Chocolat” Joanne Harris
“Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya
Sisterhood” Rebecca Wells
“Fried Green Tomatoes” Fannie
Flagg
“Finding Fish” Antwone
Quenton Fisher
“Breakfast at Tiffany’s”
Truman Capote
“Doubt” John Patrick Shanley
“Friday Night Lights” H.G.
Bissinger (a lot of bad language)
“Hearts in Atlantis” Stephen
King
“Girl With a Pearl Earring”
Tracy Chevalier
“The Legend of Bagger Vance”
Steven Pressfield
“White Oleander” Janet Fitch
“Big Fish” Daniel Wallace
“Master and Commander”
Patrick O’Brian
“Cry, the Beloved Country”
Alan Paton
“Jaws” Peter Benchley
“The Mothman Prophecies” John
A. Keel
“The Manchurian Candidate”
Richard Condon
“Bringing Down the House: . .
.Six MIT Students Who Took Vegas for Millions” Ben Mezrich
“A Beautiful Mind” Sylvia
Nasar
“Catch Me if You Can” Frank
W. Abagnale and Stan Redding
“Seabiscuit” Laura
Hillenbrand
“The Hours” Michael
Cunningham
“The Perfect Storm” Sebastian
Junger
“Possession” A.S. Byatt
“Contact” Carl Sagan
“K-Pax” Gene Brewer
“Solaris” Stanislaw Lem
“War of the Worlds” H.G.
Wells
Shakespeare’s Works
“The Winslow Boy” Terrence
Rattigan
“The Prestige” Christopher
Priest
The Lord of the Rings Seri
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
9TH - Lit Circles Final Presentation
Our
Theme: Who determines the worth of a human being?
Responsibility: Each
group must give a 3 to 5 minute presentation on how their book illustrates the
theme above. During the presentation, each group member must speak (and must
speak as part of the main idea of
the presentation, not just to say “yes” or “no” or “okay”). Each presentation
must feature a created visual. (This
visual can be a PowerPoint or a poster or a Prezi or a video, etc.) The visual
should be an important part of the presentation.
As the presentation is only 3
to 5 minutes, all of the time should be used to intelligently explain how the
book relates or explores the theme. Don’t waste time with really long summaries and be a little careful about revealing the
end of the book. If the ending is so important that it must be divulged to answer the question, so be it. But, if you can
avoid it, do.
Get with your group and try
to come up with a clever
presentation. I would start with discussing the theme and how you think your
book deals with it. Make connections and expand to other themes if you can.
Decide what sort of visual you want to make as well. Maybe a poster could show
some of the ways the theme is addressed, maybe a PowerPoint with quotes from
the book and you could flip through the slides and talk about what the quotes
represent, or maybe a video reenacting the most important scenes where the
worth of a human being is being judged, etc.
It’s all up to you. Feel free
to chat with me about your ideas and remember that this is your final project
so, though I will grade it quickly, make sure that you put the proper effort
into it.
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