Posts

Showing posts from February, 2009
Image
Monday, March 2nd: Finish reading Byron's "DON JUAN" Your analytical essay on FRANKENSTEIN is due today. FRANKENSTEIN PROMPT: Please read pages 149 - 150 and then write an essay of a minimum of two pages analyzing Shelley's use of figurative language and how it relates to the Romantic Era's philosophy. Your reading log for FRANKENSTEIN is due today. Go over "She Walks in Beauty" and Sonnet 130" comparison packet. Tuesday, March 3rd: Shortened Day! Read pages 502 - 505; biography of Percy Bysshe Shelley, "To Wordsworth", "England in 1819", "Ozymandias", and "Ode to the West Wind." For homework: please work on the packet for Shelley's "Ode to the Wes Wind". Wednesday, March 4th: Read pages 508 - 515; the biography of John Keats; "When I have Fears", "On First Looking into Chapman's Homer", "La Belle Dame Sans Merci", "Ode to a Nightingale", "Ode on a
Image
AGENDA FOR AP ENGLISH WEEK OF FEBRUARY 23RD - 27TH MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23RD: Twenty minute timed writing: Analysis of Coleridge’s “Kubla Khan”. Analyze Coleridge’s use of imagery and paradox to convey mood in “Kubla Khan”. This is the first of many timed writings and will be due at 10:10 am. Read pages 490 - 491; biography of George Gordon (Lord Byron) and “She Walks in Beauty” and “When We Two Parted”. Read FRANKENSTEIN and write a brief summary + literary tropes + vocabulary + examples of the philosophy of the Romantic Era and of Romantic literature. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24TH: Go over Unit Four from your vocabulary homework. Read pages 502 - 505; biography of Percy Bysshe Shelley, “To Wordsworth”, “England in 1819”, “Ozymandias”, “Ode to the West Wind”. What we do not finish in class today, we will finish tomorrow. Read FRANKENSTEIN and write a brief summary + literary tropes + vocabulary + examples of the philosophy of the Romantic Era and of Romantic literature. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2
Image
WEEKLY AGENDA FOR AP ENGLISH FEBRUARY 16TH MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16TH: DAY OFF! TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17TH: SHORTENED DAY! Vindication of the Rights of Women questions are due. Please bring Vocabulary Workshop; Unit 4 will be assigned today and will be due on Friday, February 20th. Read: Page 449: "Biography of William Wordsworth" Page 454: "My Heart Leaps Up "Composed upon Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1802" "It is a Beauteous Evening" Page 456: THEMES IN ENGLISH LITERATURE: The Countryside Page 457: "The World is Too Much with Us" "London, 1802" Read FRANKENSTEIN and write a brief summary + figurative tropes + vocabulary + examples of Romantic literature. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18TH: Page 463: Biography: Samuel Taylor Coleridge Page 464: "Kubla Khan" Page 465: "Comment" Pages 490: Biography:George Gordon, Lord Byron Pages 491: "She Walks in Beauty" "When We Two Parted" Read FRANKENSTEIN and write
Ms. Bridges' AP English Monday, February 9, 2009 Topics to Be Aware of While Reading Mary Shelley's FRANKENSTEIN Taking into account the philosophy of the time, think about the role of the creator, Victor Frankenstein, with the role of a divine creator (God, if you wish) and how one might see the disastrous effects that occur when man attempts to usurp God’s perceived role as creator. You don't have to agree or disagree with the premise - just be aware of how a 19th Century reader may interpret Victor Frankenstein's wanderings onto the hallowed grounds of creation. Analyze the warning Mary Shelley implicitly gives regarding out of control scientific discovery and the havoc it may wreak in nature. Analyze the significance of the subtitle of Frankenstein and the symbol- ism of the Prometheus myth as it pertains to Victor and his creation of the monster. Consider Gothic literature and analyze how Shelley’s novel is a classic example of Gothic literature. Taking a feminist
AP Assignments and Due Dates Final Week of the Fall Semester, February 2nd - 6th Hamlet “Hot Seat” questions and answers are due on Monday, February 2nd. All Hamlet Open Book Tests are due on Tuesday, February 3rd The Hamlet Reading Logs are due on Tuesday, February 3rd The Hamlet essay is due on Tuesday, February 3rd. The grading period closes for this class on Wednesday, February 4th so anything turned in after will not count. On Tuesday, you will receive a copy of Mary Shelley’s FRANKENSTEIN which we will start reading this week.