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English Through Literature

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English Through Literature Unit One Li Feng 3. Animals don t smoke. Animals don t drive. Animals don t wear make-up. Animals don t use paint. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: English Through Literature


1
English Through Literature Unit One

Li Feng
2
Unit letter
Introduce you to the course 1. It is not the
intention of this course to study literature as a
subject. 2. Not all literature is difficult. 3.
You have been provided with notes.
3
  • Why we think literary texts are such a good
    language learning resource.
  • The language of literary texts is generally much
    more carefully and artfully used than for most
    other kinds of texts.
  • Literature is also the vehicle for cultural
    information and for knowledge about the world.
  • Literature touches our lives as people.

4
  • Suggestions
  • Read a lot.
  • When you read, try to use your dictionary with
    discretion.
  • Listen to English as often as you can.
  • Keep a personal learning journal.
  • Form the habit of formulating questions.
  • Review what you have read and studied.

5
section 1 Read two fables
6
  • Objectives
  • To expose you to some simple narrative texts.
  • To demonstrate that you can read literary texts
    they are not necessarily too difficult.
  • To demonstrate the close connection between
    literature and life.

7
Fable a short tale to teach a moral lesson,
often with animals or inanimate objects as
characters
8
Text 1 A Test of Friendship
9
  • Try to understand
  • the surface meaning of the story.
  • The underlying message

10
  • Questions
  • When and where did the story take place?
  • Who took part in the story?
  • Was animal involved in the story?
  • What were they doing when the story began?
  • What happened to them?

11
Questions 6. What did they do? 7. Did they
survive? 8. What did the bear say to the man? 9.
What moral lesson does the story tell?
12
Text 2 Author James Thurber, famous humorist
and director
13
Vocabulary Entangle Devour Buzz Alight Light
Settle down Flypaper Stick
14
  • Questions
  • Who took part in this story?
  • Who is/are the main character/s?
  • Whats the purpose of the spiders net?
  • Why is the fly an intelligent one?
  • Whats the function of the flypaper?
  • Do you think the fly is really intelligent?
  • What lesson does the story tell?

15
Section 2 Task 1 A short story A Paring
Knife Pare To remove the outer covering or
skin of with a knife or similar instrument.
16
  • Questions
  • Who is telling the story?
  • Is he the only character in the story?
  • What are they doing when the story took place?
  • What happened?
  • Do you think the discovery is very important for
    the development of the story?

17
  • Narration order
  • Recent past
  • Distant past (central event)
  • What happened?
  • Why did the man go into the kitchen?
  • What did he do in the kitchen?
  • How did the man feel?
  • What did his wife do at that time?
  • What was the result of this event?
  • 3. Recent past

18
  • Questions
  • Did the wife recall the past event?
  • Why did she slide the knife back?
  • What is the theme of the story?

19
Task 2 rearrange the sentences Author Ernest
Hemingway
20
  • Section 3 Literature is all around us
  • Objectives
  • To introduce you to the playfulness of language
    use both in literature and in life.
  • To show how features of literature can also be
    found in many ordinary everyday texts.
  • To off a brief explanation of how some of these
    literary devices work.
  • Playful full of fun humorous

21
A proverbs is a piece of folk wisdom which has
become crystallized as a fixed set of
words. Proverbs use a range of literary devices.
22
alliteration repetition of consonants at the
beginning of words. He who laughs last, laughs
longest. Time and tide wait for no man.
23
parallelism the same structure is
repeated. Least said, soonest mended. He who
laughs last, laughs longest.
24
Assonance repetition of vowels. Time and tide
25
Aphorisms is a clever witty saying. Aphorisms
are different from proverbs because we usually
know who invented the aphorism in the first
place. With proverbs we dont know who first
spoke them.
26
How can I tell what I think till I see what I
say? Parallelism what I think/what I
say Alliteration see say Paradox statement that
seems to say sth. Opposite to common sense or the
truth, but which may contain a truth.
27
Oscar Wilde Work is the curse of the drinking
class. (Drink is the curse of the working
class.) Assonance work/curse
28
  • George Bernard Shaw
  • The minority is sometimes right the majority is
    always wrong.
  • parallelism
  • The grammatical structures are identical.
  • The contrasts match perfectly.

29
Graffiti are slogans painted on walls. They are
usually something to do with protest but they are
also used to exhibit a kind of popular features.
30
1. I am anonymous. Help me! (paradox) 2. Start
the day with a smile-and get it over with!
(anti-climax) 3. Think-maybe the Joneses are
trying to keep up with You! (Keeping up with the
Joneses.) (intertextuality)
31
Newspaper headlines Too Old to Work. Too Young
to Die. Parallelism Tooto Contrast old/young
work/die)
32
1.Down with Chat Up with Talk Parallelism Contra
st 2. Nothing Left but Theft Assonance 3.Twice
upon a Time Alliteration Intertextuality
33
advertisement 1.Drink a pinta milk a
day. (rhythmical repetition) 2. Twice as nice
not twice the price. (rhyme and assonance)
34
3. Animals dont smoke. Animals dont
drive. Animals dont wear make-up.
Animals dont use paint. Animals dont drink
alcohol. Animals dont drop bombs.
Because you do Why should they suffer?
(Parallelism and surprise)
35
4. Mondaily Tuesdaily Wednesdaily
Thursdaily Fridaily Saturdaily
How often do you follow the daily turn of
events? (Parallelism, blending words)
36
  • Quotations from famous writers
  • The quick and the dead.
  • For better or worse
  • Slings and arrows
  • Once more into the breach

37
  • Quotations from famous writers
  • The quick and the dead.
  • For better or worse
  • Slings and arrows
  • Once more into the breach
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