Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Wide Sargasso Sea and Web Assignment.

Hi everyone: I'll have to be brief about our last meeting to discuss Wide Sargasso Sea because I am also going to tack the Web Assignment on to this post, and that will make a lot of reading.  If you were not able to attend, please attach your response to the comment box below.

 I reiterated the importance of trying out two important skills while writing the quotations responses: a) make bold assertions about the details of the book or the book as a whole wherever possible, and b) be resourceful with the entire book, meaning you should be able to access all parts of the book to give your argument context rather than simply focusing on the quote in front of you.  After discussing these things, we had a great discussion about the Wide Sargasso Sea, considering such things as the unusual structure of the book, shifting narrative voice, the restraint of the narrative voice, and the fact that the book often does little to help orient the reader as far as voice, setting, and other contextual elements.  This discussion was deep and wide ranging.  After this, we took a look at a sample Question 2 from the AP Exam itself and we used this as an opportunity to practice annotating the text.  Annotating is essentially the act of close reading with a pencil in your end.  This will be discussed again in class.

To pull together all of the summer work, there is a final literary web project which is copied below.  We'll need to start presenting these some time late next week (meaning the end of the week of Sept. 9-13).  You can ask me questions about this in class.  In the meantime, while working on this project, please check your bookshelves, libraries and book stores for copies of Jane Eyre.  Sorry to say, but the school only owns a handful, so it would be great if you could steal your Uncle Bobby's copy for a while.  Here is the Web Assignment:




Literary Analysis Web
Making meaning by relating the parts to the whole and the whole to the parts

The Process and the Question
Over the summer we have asked questions that are essential to writing well on the AP Exam: What could each of you do to show that you understand how the parts contribute to the whole of a piece of literature?  How can you show that a writer’s choices – choices of individual events, of the order of events, of the (sometimes strange) descriptions and details, of the repeated images, of the characters and characterization, etc. – fit together to suggest something about the significance of the work as a whole?

You will answer these questions by creating a literary analysis web in response to Invisible Cities, Invisible Man, or Wide Sargasso Sea.

The Web, part one: the center
Each student will make a web. At the center of the web will be a robust paragraph (100 words to 300 words or so), explaining in your own words, your understanding of what the novel you’ve chosen is fundamentally all about. What exactly do you think the novel suggests?

(Hint: To begin thinking about the essential themes in the novels review your passage responses and the summaries of summer session discussions written by Mr. Telles.)

The "introductory" paragraph will explain your "big idea," your "bold, insightful assertion" about the novel's meaning. Spend some time with this. The GHS schoo lwide rubric says that in order for such paragraphs to be considered proficient they must be clear, supportable, debatable, and insightful; the ones that are advanced will also be sophisticated and/or original . (Warning: Do not turn to the internet looking for an answer. Rely on your own interpretive skills, your own heart and mind. Each year several students ignore this warning and end up receiving no credit (0) for one or more summer reading assignment.)

The Web, part two: the threads
Then you will connect the central paragraph to interpretations of how at least four passages in the novel support your "big idea," your "bold assertion," your "central insight". Choose passages that show development over the course of the novel (beginning, middle, and end) as well as a range of choices made by the author that contribute to the novel’s development.  (Let me make it clear that four is a minimum and to create a thoroughly convincing web you might need to refer to more passages.)

These "interpretations" need to show two things: an understanding of the passage itself and an understanding of how the passage supports your "big idea," your central insight about the significance of the whole. How you show your understanding of the passage and your understanding of its connection with the "big idea" is up to you.

To show your understanding of a passage what will you do? Will you write a paragraph (in the manner of a standard essay) explaining how the passage supports the central paragraph? Will you quote the passage in one font and offer an explication (an unfolding of meaning) in relation to your big idea by using another font? Will you create a picture that shows an understanding of the passage (and its relationship with the central paragraph)? Will this picture show symbolic understanding as well as literal understanding of the passage?

To show the connections what will you do? Will you draw lines? Will each connecting line include a sentence linking the passage with the big idea? Will you use a "footnote" or "endnote" system in which you put numbers in your central paragraph that will lead to numbers which offer explanations of how passages support the central paragraph? Will you create Powerpoint slides to show connections?

And, finally, will you go beyond? Will you show not only how the big idea is connected with passages but also how the passages are connected with each other? What else might you do to show the relationship between the parts of the novel and your understanding of the whole?

Note:

I know some of you are thinking, just tell me what to do! This is too vague.

Part of AP English Lit & Comp is learning how to be a critical, creative, resourceful, and independent reader and writer. I want you to show me that you don't need to be led by the hand but can come up with appropriate, innovative solutions to challenges. In this case I've given you a few parameters (write a central assertion of a, connect that central assertion to an understanding of at least four passages). I've given you some examples of how you might complete the assignment. I've left the rest up to you.

The Web, part three: teaching your peers
You will be creating a physical object -- a web -- and you will be called upon to explain the web at some point during the second week of class.

Grading
Advanced webs will offer an insightful, sophisticated, perhaps original understanding of the novel as a whole. This overall understanding will be linked to persuasive, nuanced understanding and interpretation of how at least four passages drawn from key moments throughout the novel support your understanding of the whole. These webs may go "beyond" the parameters of the assignment in some significant, meaningful way.

Proficient webs will offer a clear, thoughtful, plausible, understanding of the novel as a whole. This overall understanding will be linked to a reasonable understanding and interpretation of how at least four passages from the beginning, middle, and end of the novel contribute to the whole. The webs are generally considered to have succeeded in fulfilling the assignment but not to have exceeded expectations for a student entering an introductory college-level course at a competitive college or university.

Webs that need improvement may not offer a clear or plausible understanding of the novel as a whole. The central paragraph may point out themes but may not offer interpretation or insight as to the meaning of the themes in the novel. These webs refer to at least four passages but may not adequately show an understanding of the passage or of how the passage contributes to the work as a whole. The understanding and connection of some passages may be effective The passages may not be drawn from the beginning, middle, and end of the novel. In general these webs do not meet the expectations for a student entering an introductory college-level course at a competitive college or university.

Webs that receive warning status may include the weaknesses cited above but also fail to adhere to the basic parameters of the assignment. They may show little to no understanding of the novel or of the passages.

Any web that includes language or material taken directly from another source will receive a zero.

4 comments:

  1. I’m glad I touched upon this “fact that the book often does little to help orient the reader as far as voice, setting, and other contextual elements” because this is exactly what I wrote in my response (which I sent by email). More or less. I think I will do my web on this book cuz I understand it a wee bit more than the invisibles.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Wide Sargasso Sea was very intriguing for me to say the least. The themes and motifs really stood out throughput the book. Like fire for example. The book mentions fire quite often. How it killed the bird and Antoinette's brother and also how Antoinette kills her husband with fire at the end of the book. Fire seemed to be a trigger to the characters. The idea of fire triggered Antoinette to kill her husband, and it also was the reason Antoinette's mother went crazy and refused to speak to her. These things were easier to pick up on compared to other reads, and the simplicity of the langues from the narrator seemed to make it this way.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Although at times I found myself confused with what exactly was happening in the book, I must say Wide Sargasso Sea was my favorite. Antoinette has suffered a series of harsh events which made her the woman she had become, however Mr. Rochester didn't appear to agree and I believe that was one of the reasons I was so intrigued with the book. Antoinette was that diamond in the rough and for some reason from Mr. Rochester's perspective she fit in while he stood on the outside. I loved reading more and more about it because it baffled me as to why Mr. Rochester was just so crazy about Antoinette and taking away all her happiness. I found this book to be much more detailed and intriguing than the other two books and had much more fun creating the quotes. Jean Rhys is great at narrating a book and I thought she did a great job on Wide Sargasso Sea.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys was the book that interested me the most this summer. Male characters in this book were either overlooked or they played an unliked role. Sandi, Antoinette’s half brother, was only briefly mentioned, but he seemed to have played a large positive role in her life. Her father was deceased and very rarely brought up, while her stepfather was a major role in her life, but left her in the care of her aunt. Antoinette’s step brother forced her to marry Rochester, who ended up locking her up and saying she was crazy. Rhys subtly emphasizes the negative male roles in Antoinette's life by making it so anyone who would have a positive role was rarely mentioned.

    ReplyDelete