This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

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•This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

Transcript of This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

Page 1: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

Page 2: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

What is imagery? Give an example.

Page 3: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

•Who or what was the antagonist in “By the Waters of Babylon?”

Page 4: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

•Define situational irony.

Page 5: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

•Give an example of situational irony.

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• Name one of the Reading Signposts and the question you ask with it.

Page 7: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• In this point of view, the narrator knows everything about all the characters, almost as if he were godlike.

Page 8: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

•What is third person limited point of view?

Page 9: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

What P.O.V. is used here? She was so frightened by the bump in the night. She wondered if her sister was afraid, too.

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She was so frightened by the bump in the night, but her sister knew it was just the wind.

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I was so frightened by the bump in the night, but I don’t think my sister was.

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• Name one of the Reading Signposts and the question you ask with it.

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•What is indirect characterization?

Page 14: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

•What is direct characterization?

Page 15: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

Is this direct or indirect characterization?

•My English teacher is so boring.

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•What kind of characterization is this?

•Today my English teacher read the dictionary to us for the whole period.

Page 17: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• Name one of the Reading Signposts and the question you ask with it.

Page 18: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• This kind of story has a literal and symbolic meaning.

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• Name the allegory that we read in class.

Page 20: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

What kind of irony is this? Why?

Page 21: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• This is the meaning of a story, what the writer is saying about life or about people.

Page 22: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• Which is the theme of the story “The Bass, the River, and Sheila Mant?”

• A. Don’t make a fool of yourself!• B. A boy chooses a girl over a fish.• C. Love can make people do foolish

things.

Page 23: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• What is an allusion?

Page 24: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• Give an example of an allusion.

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• This part of the plot presents the characters and the basic situation.

Page 26: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• Explain the difference between an internal conflict and an external conflict.

Page 27: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• Give an example of situational irony from the story “The Chaser.”

Page 28: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• What is dramatic irony?

• What is dramatic irony?

• What is dramatic irony?

Page 29: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• Give an example of dramatic irony.

Page 30: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• What is verbal irony?

Page 31: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• Give an example of verbal irony.

Page 32: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• Give an example of first person point of view.

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• This point of view is sometimes called the video camera. Name the point if view and explain why it is called this.

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• This kind of character changes and grows over the course of the story

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• Name a dynamic character in a story we have read this term.

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• Define archetype and give an example.

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• Name Aristotle’s first step in a tragedy.

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• Name Aristotle’s second step in a tragedy.

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• What is the third step in a tragedy?

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• What is the last step in a tragedy?

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• What was Marilyn Cross’s character flaw (her hamartia)?

Page 42: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

What kind of irony is this? Why?

Page 43: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• What is the climax in the story “The Masque of the Red Death?”

Page 44: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

What kind of irony is this? Why?

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Name the allusion.

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Name the allusion.

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•Name a movie that is a hero quest, and show how two of the steps are shown in the movie.

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• Name two more steps in the hero quest archetype that are shown in a particular movie.

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What kind of irony is this?

• “Gee,” said Marcus, “I’m really going to miss school while I’m on Fall Break.”

Page 50: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• Define round character.

Page 51: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• Name a round character (that has not already been named) from a story we have read.

Page 52: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• Define Flat Character.

Page 53: This is the person or force that is working against the protagonist.

• Name an example of a flat character from a movie.

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•Show how the By the Waters of Babylon fulfills at least three steps of a hero quest.