The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature,...

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The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst

Transcript of The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature,...

Page 1: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

The Scarlet IbisBy James Hurst

Page 2: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Allusion• A reference to some person,

historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc.• Her smile was that of the Mona Lisa,

distant and insecure. • This vacation is like Eden (paradise).

Page 3: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Characterization• A method in which the author

uses to develop the characters (bring them to live).• Pogo’s tongue hung from his

mouth lazily as he walked to get the ball his owner threw to him.

Page 4: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Conflict • A struggle between two or

more opposing forces.• Sam lied to her mother, and

she cried every night because her mother believed that she passed the test.

Page 5: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Diction• The author’s choice of

words.• The young boy “says”• The young boy

“exclaimed”

Page 6: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Imagery

• Description words used to paint a picture in the reader’s mind (involves the five senses)• The snow fluttered down from

the clouds like down feathers from a pillow fight lightly, gently layering a mystical frosted path.

Page 7: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Denotation•Dictionary meaning of the

word•house: a male dwelling

place

Page 8: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Connotation • The social/emotional meaning

attached to the word• Ex: which one sounds warm and

welcoming: house or home?• Home has a more welcome and

warm association rather than house.

Page 9: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Setting• Time and place in which

the events in a narrative take place

Page 10: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Theme • An author’s main message usually told

through the setting, plot, resolution, and characters- usually implied and not directly stated• More than one word• Friendship: a stronger theme would be

Friendship can last a life time through memories

Page 11: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Tone• The author’s attitude,

stated or implied, toward the subject or audience

Page 12: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Situational Irony• The contradiction between

what is expected to happen and what actually does happen

Page 13: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Direct Characterization•Personality and physical

traits are explicitly described

Page 14: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Foreshadowing•Use of hints and details

that predict events

Page 15: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Inciting Incident • Introduces the central

conflict

Page 16: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Indirect Characterization

• A character is developed through the thoughts, actions, words (dialogue), and interactions with other characters

Page 17: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Protagonist • The main character in the

story

Page 18: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Symbol• Something that represents or

stands for something else larger than itself• Ex: Flag=freedom, liberty,

United States

Page 19: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Dramatic Irony• The audience knows more

about the events than the characters know

Page 20: The Scarlet Ibis By James Hurst. Allusion A reference to some person, historical event, literature, work of art, Bible, etc. Her smile was that of the.

Verbal Irony•When statements are

made that contrast what is actually meant (sarcasm)