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Nonfiction – Reading Unit. Introduction. Essay: A nonfiction, shorter work that is NOT poetry or verse. Good Readers = Good Writers BECAUSE We model We become critical thinkers We learn strategies (juxtaposition, metaphor, anaphora) We learn new vocabulary
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Introduction • Essay: A nonfiction, shorter work that is NOT poetry or verse. • Good Readers = Good Writers • BECAUSE • We model • We become critical thinkers • We learn strategies (juxtaposition, metaphor, anaphora) • We learn new vocabulary • We learn what we like and what we don’t like • Reading for pleasure NEEDS to be part of our lives: Start thinking about what you want to read for pleasure…
“Learning to Read and Write: Superman and Me”Sherman Alexie • Author’s Purpose: • Inspire individuals to read • Reading opens doors • Author’s techniques • Motif – A reoccurring image, subject metaphor, or theme in a work: Heroes • Metaphor – A comparison saying one thing is another: “A paragraph was a fence with words.” • Anaphora – Repetition of the first word or words in a series of sentences or phrases: “I read…I read…I read…” paragraph 6 • Juxtaposition – 2 opposite ideas NEXT to each other for comparison: “They” (paragraph 5) versus “I” (paragraph 6)
“Listening” – Eudora Welty • Voice: Author’s style, the quality that makes his or her writing unique, and which conveys the author’s attitude, personality, character. • Sensory Images: Images created in your head from a very detailed description of something, often using more than one of the five senses (sight, smell, taste, touch, hearing).
“Listening” – Eudora Welty • “The sound of what falls on the page begins the process of testing it for truth.” • As readers we have to LISTEN for what works and what does not. Be aware of a writer’s voice and your own voice in writing. How a piece of writing sounds is as important as what it says. Can we believe it, trust it, be engaged with it?
Welty, Eudora. “Listening.” in Cohen, Samuel, ed. 50 Essays: A portable Anthology. 2nd ed. New York: Bedford/St. Martins, 2007. • SIGHT: “In ‘Once Upon a Time,’ an ‘O’ had a rabbit running it as a treadmill, his feet upon the flowers” (Welty 440). • SMELL: “…the cup of the yellow daffodils gave off whiffs just alike” (440). • TOUCH: “…their weight and with their possession in their arms, captured and carried off to myself” (437). • TASTE: “It had the roundness of a Concord grape Grandpa took off his vine and gave me to suck out of its skin and swallow whole, in Ohio” (441). • HEAR: “Her voice came out just a little bit in the minor key” (441).
Frederick Douglass“Learning to Read and Write” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Su-4JBEIhXY
Using Douglass to Understand MainIdea & Details of a Paragraph. Introductory info on how he started to learn to read and write • Learned to read and write • Mistress instructed him • Stopped teaching him when husband said she couldn’t teach a slave • Learned to treat slaves like “brutes” even though she “lacked depravity” – she was kind
Douglass – paragraph 2 Provide further details about Mistress Hugh: slavery hurt her as much as him • Mistress was kind & tender-hearted • Treated him like a human at first • Took away her good qualities • Stopped teaching him • Started to become angry when she saw him reading • Learned education and slavery were incompatible