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Embedding Context into - PowerPoint Presentation

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Uploaded On 2018-11-08

Embedding Context into - PPT Presentation

Analysis Objective To integrate context into our analysis of Jekyll and Hyde Starter Vocabulary Quiz What can you remember from yesterday Answer at the back of your books 1 Which ID: 722976

abhorrent stevenson context adjective stevenson abhorrent adjective context analysis depraved dark savage meaning feral change streets story deeply read hidden encouraged means

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Slide1

Embedding Context into Analysis

Objective: To integrate context into our analysis of Jekyll and Hyde. Slide2

Starter: Vocabulary Quiz – What can you remember from yesterday?

Answer at the back of your books

1) Which adjective means ‘horrifyingly bad’?

a. Feral

.

b. Abhorrent.c. Savage.d. Depraved.2) Which noun is the part of the mind you’re unaware of, but which influences your actions?a. Subconscious.b. Supernatural.c. Consciousness.d. Ethics.Slide3

3) Which noun is a

change back to the way your ancestors used to be (i.e, becoming like a caveman)?a) Duality.b

) Repression.c

) Aberration

.

d) Atavism. 4) Which adjective means ‘fierce, violent, uncontrolled’?a) Depraved.b) Feral.c) Abhorrent.d) Savage.Slide4

5) A

metamorphosis is…a) A change from one state to another.b) A moral rule that affects behaviour.c) A

hint at a hidden meaning.d) An

unwelcome and unexpected change

6) Which adjective means ‘morally corrupt or wicked’?a) Feral.b) Abhorrent.c) Unorthodox.d) Depraved.Slide5

7) Which

adjective describes something which goes against what is normal or expected?a) Depraved.b) Unorthodox.c) Abhorrent

.d) Savage

.

8) Which

adjective describes something which is wild and animalistic?a) Unorthodox.b) Feral.c) Abhorrent.d) Savage.Slide6

9) What

name is given to two opposites which cannot exist without each other?Duality.Aberration.Atavism.Repression

.10) An aberration is…

a) An

unwelcome and unexpected change.

b) A story with a hidden meaning.c) A hint at a hidden meaning.d) A moral rule that affects behaviour.Slide7

Homework: Complete your story

This will serve to me as an early idea of where you are with creative writing.

Aim to write approximately three pages in your book.

Use as many of the new vocabulary words as makes sense,

Due: Tuesday.Slide8

AO3: Applying context

Jekyll and Hyde is a dark novel and would have been treated as thus when published in 1886. Knowing about Stevenson’s life and his background will enable you to read more deeply into the meaning of the text.

Carefully read the information.

TASK

: From, what you know of the novel thus far, which three facts about RLS’s early life most influenced Jekyll and Hyde?

1.

2.

3. Slide9

Applying Context to the Analysis of Settings

Let’s go back to the two paragraphs we looked at on Tuesday. Question: What do these descriptions of places tell us about Stevenson’s fascination with the city streets?

First, identify key quotations from the extracts. Then choose one to explore fully for a SQUAD paragraph. Slide10

Example

Statement - Stevenson creates a huge contrast between the two descriptions, using positive language in one and negative in the

other. Quotation - The

characters who inhabit these streets reflect their surroundings. “Smiling saleswomen” are juxtaposed with slouching “tramps”, and even the schoolboy mentioned is menacing as he carries a “knife”.

Analysis - The sense that London’s night-time streets are a place to be feared is obvious, and suggests that further crimes may be committed in the “sinister” streets. Development - Stevenson grew up in Edinburgh, a city with great contrasts between its spacious, clean ‘new town’ and its dark, claustrophobic ‘old town’. This has influenced his work, with this fascination reflected in the vibrant description of London and the gloomy, run-down version. As a child, Stevenson was drawn to these dark places against his parents’ wishes, and it is little surprise that he chose to put his villain in similar dark and dingy locations – Stevenson learned to associate them with criminality, making them the perfect setting for a story about a man exploring the darker, immoral side of his personality. Slide11

What can you remember?

How did a thyroid complaint affect Robert Louis Stevenson?a. It left him with distended bones.

b. It made him unable to read as a child.

c

. It

left him fascinated by medical science.d. It made him deeply religious.How did his nanny influence Robert Louis Stevenson?a. She encouraged him to explore the darker side of Edinburgh.b. She was deeply religious and told him old folk tales.c. She encouraged him to write poems and stories.d. She encouraged him to travel the world.