Wednesday, April 6 Grab handout Homework: Bring Wuthering Heights tomorrow for points.

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Wednesday, April 6 Grab handout Homework: Bring Wuthering Heights tomorrow for points

Transcript of Wednesday, April 6 Grab handout Homework: Bring Wuthering Heights tomorrow for points.

Page 1: Wednesday, April 6 Grab handout Homework: Bring Wuthering Heights tomorrow for points.

Wednesday, April 6

• Grab handout

• Homework:

Bring Wuthering Heights tomorrow for points

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Wuthering Heights

Emily Bronte

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Emily Brontë• Came from a creative

family.

• Had an unfortunate family life.

• Almost everything we know about Bronte comes from the writings of others.

• Wuthering Heights wasn’t well received at first, but is now considered a literary classic.

A portrait made by her brother.

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Wuthering Heights • First published in 1847 under the

pseudonym Ellis Bell.

• Violence, passion, the supernatural, heightened emotion and emotional distance, an unusual mix for any novel but particularly at this time.

• A prime example of literature from a woman's point of view during this time period.

• Elements of Romanticism, Gothic Romanticism, and Victorian Literature.

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Yorkshire Moors

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Setting• The story begins in 1801, then flashes back to the

1770's and eventually returns to the early 1800's. The locale is the Yorkshire moors in northern England.

• A moor is tract of mostly treeless wasteland where heather thrives and water saturates the earth.

• The action takes place at two estates, Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross Grange, about four miles apart.

• When the story begins, Mr. Lockwood—a visitor to the moors—establishes the remoteness and isolation of the setting.

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Frame Narrative

• A narrative technique whereby an introductory main story is composed, at least in part, for the purpose of setting the stage for a fictive narrative or organizing a set of shorter stories, each of which is a story within a story.

• Leads readers from the first story into the smaller one within it.

• Bronte uses this literary device to tell the story of Heathcliff and Catherine, along with the subplots.

• Examples: Forrest Gump, Slumdog Millionaire

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Narration

• First Person

• Mr. Lockwood – A guest at Wuthering Heights. The story begins with Lockwood narrating.

• Nelly Dean – The housekeeper. She has lived with the novel’s two main families for two generations.

• These two narrators facilitate the frame narrative.

• Lockwood – present time

• Nelly – flash backs

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Vocabulary

• You may not be familiar with some of the vocabulary in the book.

• Use context clues and a dictionary.

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Characters• Can be confusing!

• The characters all have similar names.

• The frame narrative also makes keeping everyone straight a little confusing.

• Use your character chart and make your own notes to help keep everyone straight.

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Themes

• Social Class

• Feminism

• Revenge

• And many more! (love and passion, fate, the supernatural, the setting of the moors)

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Literary Tools

• Alliteration

• Hyperbole

• Metaphor

• Onomatopoeia

• Paradox

• Personification

• Simile

• Imagery – supports the atmosphere of the novel and the moods of the characters. • Wuthering Heights• Nature• Gothic Atmosphere

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Tomorrow

• Make sure you bring Wuthering Heights!