Ethan Frome Introduction Begin Reading Today, in English… HW: Context Clues #4.

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Transcript of Ethan Frome Introduction Begin Reading Today, in English… HW: Context Clues #4.

•Ethan Frome Introduction•Begin Reading

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…HW: Context Clues #4

Copy into journal: uncomplicated: not complex, not perplexing

un- not, reversalcom-with, together plicare [plic, plicit, ply, plex, ple, play, ploy] folded

Copy into journal: nonextended: not opened, not stretched

non- notex- out of, away fromtendere [tend, tent, and tens]. To stretch, extend

For Dojo points, what words can you think of that have any of these roots or prefixes?

Day 12 – 12/9Power-Up!

un- not, reversalcom-with, together plicare [plic, plicit, ply, plex, ple, play, ploy] foldednon- notex- out of, away fromtendere [tend, tent, and tens]. To stretch, extend

Ethan Fromeby Edith Wharton

Introduction

Background

Discussion Starters

What happens if people miss a chance to find happiness?

Ethan Frome: Introduction

Will they get another chance?

What if they don’t?

Ethan Frome: IntroductionAn unnamed narrator is spending the winter in a small New England town.

The deep snow keeps people trapped inside and squashes most signs of life.

There is little to do except to watch the other people in the town—and wonder about them.

Ethan Frome: Introduction

One of the people he observers is Ethan Frome, a tall man with a dramatic limp and a scar on his face.

Ethan Frome: Introduction

He seems to have given up all personal interests and finds no joy in life.

Ethan lives on a bleak, poor farm.

Ethan Frome: Introduction

and her cousin, Mattie Silver—who has an affliction of her own.

He lives with his wife, Zeena,

Ethan Frome: Introduction

The unnamed narrator tries to figure it out and offers his own version of a story….

Ethan, Zeena, and Mattie form a hopeless love triangle in which attempts to find happiness or to escape can only end in tragedy….

Ethan Frome: Background

Ethan Frome is a frame story.

In a frame story, one story introduces another, and then returns at the conclusion.

Story One Story Two Story One

Ethan Frome: Background

The narrator begins the story with his own experiences,

then describes what he thinks happened to Ethan Frome,

Narrator’s life

Ethan’s story

Narrator’s life

and finally returns to his own perspective at the end of the novel.

Edith Wharton: Author BackgroundEdith Wharton was born into a rich and socially prominent New York family in 1862.

Her first novel, The House of Mirth, focused on the same wealthy and sophisticated society that she knew so well.

Edith Wharton: Author Background

When Ethan Frome was published in 1911, some reviewers and readers were skeptical that Wharton could write realistically about poor farmers.

Wharton responded that she wanted to show life as it really was in the poor villages of New England.

She felt that many other writers had romanticized the poverty and toil that people in these towns faced.

Edith Wharton: Author Background

In the 1880s, life for New England farmers was extremely difficult, filled with backbreaking labor for little reward.

Life was often worse for their wives, who were extremely isolated, working at home alone with no television, radio, or telephone.

Edith Wharton: Author Background

Despite her wealth, Wharton’s life was also difficult in many ways.

Her husband did not appreciate her writing, embezzled money from her to spend on another woman, and was abusive and mentally unstable.

Edith Wharton: Author Background

Eventually, Wharton took bold steps for a woman of her time and background: she left and eventually divorced her husband. She moved to Paris, where she had an affair of her own.

She continued writing and won the Pulitzer Prize in 1921 for her novel The Age of Innocence.

Ethan Frome: Discussion StartersDiscuss (1)

• What other stories that you know contain a frame story?

• Why do you think an author might choose to tell a story in this way?

Ethan Frome: Discussion Starters

Discuss (2)

Have you ever made up the life story of someone you’ve observed? Why did you want to do so?

Even if a story is based on some facts, do you think you could ever know what really happened? Why or why not?

Tonight, for English…

HW: Context Clues #4