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Literature

Check List

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14 line sonnet -DONE Facebook ? DONE Grades or Bust - DONE Where I?m from ? DONE Life after Death - DONE Magic Analysis - DONE Malcolm X - DONE Zombie Story - DONE Piano in the Morning - DONE Romeus and Juliet - DONE Night Circus 1 - DONE Night Circus 2 - DONE Night Circus 3 - DONE Night Circus 4 - DONE Ribbon Cutting Essay - DONE
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The Pressures of Society

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Oct. 12, 2012 Write 3 The Pressures of Society In the world today, society has a great control over the social order of life and can pressure people into unwelcome circumstances. In fact, fiction authors, such as Kate Chopin and Shirley Jackson, replicate society pressures in their short stories. This pressure for their characters, Tessie Hutchinson from ?The Lottery? and Desiree Aubigny from ?Desiree?s Baby,? leads to death. These two stories can be compared by focusing on the demands of society, the reaction of the main characters, and the outcome of the conflict.

american pagent ch 15&16 vocab

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Diana Chetnik 11-18-13 Vocab ch 15, 16, & 17 APUSH Chapter 15 Ralph Waldo Emerson- Wrote the popular lecture-essay ?Self-Reliance?. Insurmountable- Too great to be overcome ?Kentucky Bluegrass?- European bluegrass that thrived on charred canefields and made ideal pastures for livestock, luring Americans into Kentucky. George Catlin- A painter and student of Native American life. Was one of the first Americans to push for the preservation of nature as a national policy. He observed Sioux Indians slaughter buffalo in 1832 in order to trade the animal?s tongues for the white man?s whiskey. He was appalled by this and proposed the creation of a national park, beginning with Yellowstone Park in 1872. ?Queen of the South?- What New Orleans was called.

AP Lang Handbook

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The Hodgenator?s AP Language and Composition Handbook Please Note: This handbook is NOT to leave the classroom. If you wish to have your own copy, you may print it from the class website, Facebook, or Edmodo. If these are not an option for you and really want your own copy, please see Ms. Hodgens privately. Tone and Attitude Words Positive Tone/Attitude Words Amiable Consoling Friendly Playful Amused Content Happy Pleasant Appreciative Dreamy Hopeful Proud Authoritative Ecstatic Impassioned Relaxed Benevolent Elated Jovial Reverent Brave Elevated Joyful Romantic Calm Encouraging Jubilant Soothing Cheerful Energetic Lighthearted Surprised Cheery Enthusiastic Loving Sweet Compassionate Excited Optimistic Sympathetic

ch_8_writing_about_literature.pdf

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Marco Ponce Version 1 Year ?06-?07 CH 8 Writing about Literature * Writing about literature offers several benefits. Weighing and recording your thought on the different elements sharpen your critical thinking ability. Literary papers also pay artistic dividends, as careful reading and subsequent writing deepen your appreciation of the writer?s craft. Focusing, gathering information, organizing, writing, revising, and editing?the old familiar trail leads to success here too. 8.1 The Elements of Literature Most writing assignments on literature will probably feature one or more of the following elements: plot, point of view, character, setting, symbols, irony, and theme. Depending on the work, some of these will be more important than others. 8.1.1 Plot

The jungle By Upton Sinclair

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 The Jungle was written by Upton Sinclair in 1906. It was first published in Chicago, in February 26, 1906. The Jungle is a fictional novel, a political fiction; there are 401 pages in this navel. The Jungle is a good novel that anyone could read and enjoy; this novel shows readers how Capitalism effected the lives of the immigrant. It takes readers behind the factory, and show them how food were properted in 20th century
 
 

spnaish

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Alice rests at home in an armchair, talking drowsily to herself as her black kitten, Kitty, plays with a ball of string at her feet. Alice lovingly scolds the kitten for unraveling the ball of string that she had been winding up. She goes on to scold Kitty?s mother, Dinah, who is busy bathing the white kitten Snowdrop. Alice begins an imaginative conversation with Kitty, pretending that her pet talks back, and asks her to pretend that she is the Red Queen in a chess game. Alice attempts to arrange Kitty?s forelegs to better resemble the chess piece. When Kitty does not comply, Alice holds her up to the mirror above the mantle and threatens to put Kitty into the world on the other side of the mirror, which she calls ?Looking-Glass House.?

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