1 / 12

Quotation analysis

Quotation analysis. Puck’s Soliloquy and Preparing for the Unit Test. What is quotation analysis?. Tell your reader what meaning you find in the quote. Explain how this passage relates to what you take to be author’s central idea.

byrd
Download Presentation

Quotation analysis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Quotation analysis Puck’s Soliloquy and Preparing for the Unit Test

  2. What is quotation analysis? • Tell your reader what meaning you find in the quote. Explain how this passage relates to what you take to be author’s central idea. • The important idea to recognize is that all aspects of analysis are interrelated.

  3. The Five Areas of Analysis Where do we need to focus?

  4. What are the five areas of analysis? Plot Setting time (Elizabethan era – role of women) place (geographical location) – Dunsinane, Inverness, Verona atmosphere (tone, mood, or emotions related to scene: foreboding, gloomy, joyous, tense, sombre, jubilant, triumphant) socioeconomic status (class system: courtiers (royalty) vs. working class) • key points in the plot triangle (exposition, inciting incident, rising action, climax, dénouement, catastrophe) • background (antecedent) information • offstage information (unseen by audience) • complications • advancements of the plot (pushes plot forward)

  5. Five Areas of Analysis Character Theme motif or recurring concrete images often point to a particular theme AMND: Love and Marriage, Order and Disorder, Appearance vs Reality Motifs: nature, the moon, sleep and dreams, eyes, magic • personality/nature or changes therein • relationships or changes therein • motivations • states of mind or awareness (psychological? emotional? intellectual?)

  6. 5 areas of analysis Special Dramatic Effects • dramatic irony, foreshadowing, pathetic fallacy, pathos, comic relief, juxtaposition of scenes, soliloquy) • language literary devices (e.g., allusion, paradox, metaphor/simile, personification, oxymoron, metonymy, synecdoche)

  7. Puck’s Soliloquy Act V, Epilogue

  8. Format of Passage Analysis 1. Begin with author and name of text. For Shakespearean plays, address Act and Scene as well. • “This passage, from the epilogue in Act V of William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, highlights…”

  9. Format of Passage Analysis 2. Address speaker, audience, and context/situation. • “Puck’s soliloquy where he addresses the audience at the conclusion of the play, after the plot of the 4 lovers, Theseus and Hippolyta, and Oberon and Titania are resolved.”

  10. Format of Passage Analysis • Highlight the blueprint, which outlines the points you will be discussing. • “The importance of the quote can be seen through an analysis of plot, setting, character, theme and special dramatic effects.”

  11. Format of Passage Analysis • For each paragraph, you must follow a specific pattern: • T – Transition • A – Answer • R – Reason • E – Evidence • E - Explanation • “Firstly (T), setting plays a key role in understanding Puck’s soliloquy(A) because it highlights the emotional tone and atmosphere of the play(R). As many of the characters (Bottom and Theseus among them) believe that the magical events of the play’s action were merely a dream, Puck tells the crowd that if the play has offended them, they too should remember it simply as a dream—“That you have but slumbered here, / While these visions did appear” (Ev).The speech offers a commentary on the dreamlike atmosphere of A Midsummer Night’s Dream and casts the play as a magical dream in which the audience shares”(Ex).

  12. Puck’s Soliloquy Using the format outlined, write a passage analysis of Puck’s soliloquy for homework tonight ready to be submitted tomorrow.

More Related