Thursday, February 14, 2013

Tandem Short Story


CW8
Ms. Gamzon
Tandem Short Story
1.      Today we will try to write what is called the tandem story.  The instructions are simple. 
2.      Each person will pair off with a partner (or partners ).
3.      One of you will then write the first paragraph of a short story.   Focus on creating a CHARACTER with a CONFLICT.  Remember to indicate SETTING (time, place).
4.      The second partner will read the first paragraph and then add another paragraph to the story. 
5.      The first person (or next partner) will then add a third paragraph, and so on back and forth.
6.      Remember to re-read what has been written each time in order to keep the story making sense. 
7.      The story is over when the partners agree a conclusion has been reached.







Elements of Fiction

Agenda:

What Makes a Story?
Who,
What,
Where,
When,
Why
How


Elements of Fiction

The Elements of Fiction

Plot, Setting, Character, Conflict, Symbol, and Point of View are the main elements which fiction writers use to develop a story and its Theme.

Because literature is an art and not a science, it is impossible to specifically quantify any of these elements within any story or to guarantee that each will be present in any given story.  Setting might be the most important element in one and almost nonexistent in another.

Just as a Crime Scene Investigator cannot approach a crime scene looking for a specific clue (e. g., shell casings), you as a reader cannot approach a story deciding to look for a specific element, such as Symbol.  To assume could blind you to important elements.  Both the CSI team and you must examine the entire “area” carefully to determine what is present and how it is important.

With that understanding, let’s examine the elements.

PLOT
Literature teachers sometimes give the impression that plot is not important, that anyone interested in plot is an immature reader. 

Of course plot is important.  It was what got us interested in reading in the first place.  It was the carrot on the string that pulled us through a story as we wanted to see what would happen next.

That said, let me emphasize that plot is rarely the most important element of a good story.  As much as I’ve always loved surprise endings, if the only thing a film or a story has is a great twist ending, it doesn’t have anything on a second look.

And it’s worth noting that recent fiction and film have deemphasized plot, frequently stressing character or conflict for example.  In film, for example, think David Lynch or Pulp Fiction.

SETTING
Stories actually have two types of setting:  Physical and Chronological. 

The physical setting is of course where the story takes place.  The “where” can be very general—a small farming community, for example—or very specific—a two story white frame house at 739 Hill Street in Scott City, Missouri.

Likewise, the chronological setting, the “when,” can be equally general or specific.

The author’s choices are important.  Shirley Jackson gives virtually no clues as to where or when her story “The Lottery” is set.  Examination suggests that she wants the story to be universal, not limited by time or place.  The first two stories you will read each establish a fairly specific physical setting; consider what each setting brings to each story.



CHARACTER
What type of individuals are the main characters?  Brave, cowardly, bored, obnoxious?  If you tell me that the protagonist (main character) is brave, you should be able to tell where in the story you got that perception.

In literature, as in real life, we can evaluate character three ways:  what the individual says, what the individual does, and what others say about him or her.

CONFLICT
Two types of conflict are possible:  External and Internal.

External conflict could be man against nature (people in a small lifeboat on a rough ocean) or man against man.

While internal conflict might not seem as exciting as external, remember that real life has far more internal than external conflict. 

Film and fiction emphasize external conflict not simply because “it’s more interesting” but also because it’s easier to write.  In a film script, you merely have to write “A five minute car chase follows” and you’ve filled five minutes.  How long would it take to write five minutes worth of dialogue?

SYMBOL
Don’t get bent out of shape about symbols.  Simply put, a symbol is something which means something else.  Frequently it’s a tangible physical thing which symbolizes something intangible.  The Seven/Eleven stores understood that a few years ago when they were selling roses with a sign saying, “A Rose Means ‘I Love You.’”

The basic point of a story or a poem rarely depends solely on understanding a symbol.  However important or interesting they might be, symbols are usually “frosting,” things which add interest or depth.

It’s normal for you to be skeptical about symbols.  If I tell you that the tree in a certain story symbolizes the Garden of Eden, you may ask “Is that really there or did you make it up?” or “How do you know what the author meant?”

Literature teachers may indeed “over-interpret” at times, find symbols that really aren’t there.  But if you don’t occasionally chase white rabbits that aren’t there, you’ll rarely find the ones that are there. 

In the film 2001, a computer named HAL is controlling a flight to Jupiter.  When the human crew decides to abort the mission, HAL—programmed to guarantee the success of the mission—“logically” begins to kill off the humans.  Science fiction’s oldest theme:  man develops a technology which he not only cannot control, it controls him. 

Consider HAL’s name.  Add one letter to each of the letters in his name.  Change the H to I, the A to B, and the L to M.  When you realize how close HAL is to IBM, the first response is disbelief.  But clearly the closeness of the names is either an absolute accident or an intentional choice.  As much as we are startled by the latter, we probably agree that the odds against the former—it being an accident—are astronomical.

Somebody thought that up.  Or maybe a computer.      

POINT OF VIEW
Point of View is the “narrative point of view,”  how the story is told—more specifically, who tells it.

There are two distinctly different types of point of view and each of those two types has two variations.

In the First Person point of view, the story is told by a character within the story, a character using the first person pronoun, I.

If the narrator is the main character, the point of view is first person protagonist.  Mark Twain lets Huck Finn narrate his own story in this point of view.

If the narrator is a secondary character, the point of view is first person observer.  Arthur Conan Doyle lets Sherlock Holmes’ friend Dr. Watson tell the Sherlock Holmes story.  Doyle frequently gets credit for telling detective stories this way, but Edgar Allan Poe perfected the technique half a century earlier.

In the Third Person point of view, the story is not told by a character but by an “invisible author,” using the third person pronoun (he, she, or it) to tell the story.  Instead of Huck Finn speaking directly to us, “My name’s Huckleberry Finn” and telling us “I killed a pig and spread the blood around so people would think I’d been killed”, the third person narrator would say:  He killed a pig and spread the blood…..

If the third person narrator gives us the thoughts of characters (He wondered where he’d lost his baseball glove), then he is a third person omniscient (all knowing) narrator. 

If the third person narrator only gives us information which could be recorded by a camera and microphone (no thoughts), then he is a third person dramatic narrator.

In summary, then, here are the types of point of view:

First Person Narrator
            Protagonist
            Observer

Third Person Narrator
            Omniscient
            Dramatic    
       
Different points of view can emphasize different things.  A first person protagonist narrator would give us access to the thoughts of the main character.  If the author doesn’t want us to have that access, he could use the first person observer, for example, or the third person dramatic.

THEME
Theme isn’t so much an element of fiction as much as the result of the entire story.  The theme is the main idea the writer of the poem or story wants the reader to understand and remember. 

You may have used the word “Moral” in discussing theme; but it’s not a good synonym because “moral” implies a positive meaning or idea.  And not all themes are positive. 

One word—love, for example—may be a topic; but it cannot be a theme.

A theme is a statement about a topic.

For example:  “The theme of the story is that love is the most important thing in the world.”  That’s a cliché, of course, but it is a theme.

Not all stories or poems (or films) have an overriding “universal” theme.   


Where Writing Hides--Poem #3

Where does writing hide

Valentine for Ernest Mann
www.youtube.com/watch?v=d844YLUOiWA
Naomi Shihab Nye

www.youtube.com/watch?v=IstddUK57aY

You can't order a poem like you order a taco.
Walk up to the counter, say, "I'll take two"
and expect it to be handed back to you
on a shiny plate.
Still, I like your spirit.
Anyone who says, "Here's my address,
write me a poem," deserves something in reply.
So I'll tell you a secret instead:
poems hide. In the bottoms of our shoes,
they are sleeping. They are the shadows
drifting across our ceilings the moment
before we wake up. What we have to do
is live in a way that lets us find them.
Once I knew a man who gave his wife
two skunks for a valentine.
He couldn't understand why she was crying.
"I thought they had such beautiful eyes."
And he was serious. He was a serious man
who lived in a serious way. Nothing was ugly
just because the world said so. He really
liked those skunks. So, he reinvented them
as valentines and they became beautiful.
At least, to him. And the poems that had been hiding
in the eyes of the skunks for centuries
crawled out and curled up at his feet.
Maybe if we reinvent whatever our lives give us
we find poems. Check your garage, the odd sock
in your drawer, the person you almost like, but not quite.
And let me know.
--Naomi Shihab Nye
© Naomi Shihab Nye. Used for educational or therapeutic purposes.


Journal prompts:
    Write about an unusual gift you've given, or received.
    Write about a time you reinvented something your life gave you.
    Where do your poems hide?Make a list.  turn it into a poem.

Thursday, January 31, 2013

15 sentence poem








Check out this website:

 

http://jeriwb.com/writers-workout-15-sentence-portrait-poem-317/15-Sentence Portrait Guidelines

For a title, choose words for an emotion or a color that represents an important person in your life. You will not mention this person’s name in the writing.
1. For the first-line starter, choose one of the following:
• You stand there… / No one is here… / In this (memory, photograph, dream, etc.), you are… / I think sometimes… / The face is… / We had been… / Now complete this sentence.
2. Write a sentence with a color in it.
3. Write a sentence with a part of the body in it.
4. Write a sentence with a simile (a comparison using like or as).
5. Write a sentence of over 15 words.
6. Write a sentence under eight words.
7. Write a sentence with a piece of clothing in it.
8. Write a sentence with a wish in it.
9. Write a sentence with an animal in it.
10. Write a sentence in which three or more words alliterate; that is they begin with the same initial consonant, as in “Suzie sells seashells by the seashore.”
11. Write a sentence with two commas.
12. Write a sentence with a smell and a color in it.
13. Write another sentence with a simile.
14. Write a sentence with four words or less in it.
15. Write a sentence to end this portrait that uses the word or words you chose for a title.

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Where I'm From

Where I'm From

AGENDA:
  • Review GENRES---Poetry, Fiction, Nonfiction, drama

  • Show "Where I'm From" video and explain assignment

  • Go to computer lab to work on Where I'm From poem
  •  

www.georgeellalyon.com/where.html
The WHERE I'M FROM Template
  1. I am from _______ (specific ordinary item), from _______ (product name) and _______.
  2. I am from the _______ (home description... adjective, adjective, sensory detail).
  3. I am from the _______ (plant, flower, natural item), the _______ (plant, flower, natural detail)
  4. I am from _______ (family tradition) and _______ (family trait), from _______ (name of family member) and _______ (another family name) and _______ (family name).
  5. I am from the _______ (description of family tendency) and _______ (another one).
  6. From _______ (something you were told as a child) and _______ (another).
  7. I am from (representation of religion, or lack of it). Further description.
  8. I'm from _______ (place of birth and family ancestry), _______ (two food items representing your family).
  9. From the _______ (specific family story about a specific person and detail), the _______ (another detail, and the _______ (another detail about another family member).
  10. I am from _______ (location of family pictures, mementos, archives and several more lines indicating their worth).

Monday, January 28, 2013

Welcome CW 8


Introduction to the course

  Tell us about yourself:

2 Truths and a Lie











A lie (also called prevarication, falsehood) is a type of deception in the form of an untruthful statement, especially with the intention to deceive others.









Art is the lie that enables us to realize the truth.
Pablo Picasso


Happy Birthday, Picasso! (Picture of the Day)

Pablo Picasso. Credit: Rene Burri/Magnum Photos
Today marks the 130th anniversary of the birth of Pablo Picasso, the co-creator of Cubism and one of the most influential artists of the 20th century. Picasso’s career was remarkable for both its length (he held his first exhibition when he was just 13 years old) and its breadth (he explored a wide range of arts, including painting, sculpting, printmaking, ceramics, and stage design). From his “Blue Period” to his development (with Georges Braque) of Cubism, from his flirtation with Surrealism to his global post-World War II fame, the name “Picasso” has come to be virtually synonymous with artistic achievement, in much the same way “Einstein” or “Shakespeare” connote mastery in science or literature.
The Old Guitarist by Pablo Picasso. Credit: Courtesy of The Art Institute of Chicago
Still Life with Chair Caning by Pablo Picasso. Credit: © S.P.A.D.E.M. Paris, 1972
Three Musicians by Pablo Picasso. Credit: Philadelphia Museum of Art
Seated Harlequin by Pablo Picasso. Credit: Courtesy of the Public Art Museum, Basel, Switz.
Guernica by Pablo Picasso. Credit: DeA Picture Library
Pablo Picasso (right) with one of his pottery designs. Credit: EB Inc.
 






 

The Lying Game

Instructions

    • 1
      Provide each person with a slip of paper and pen or pencil. Instruct everyone to write down three statements about themselves. Two of the statements should be true and one of them should be a lie. Allow everyone about 5 minutes to come up with three good statements.
    • 2
      Select a person to go first. That person should read aloud her three statements. Then, conduct voting by having the person read her statements again, asking for a show of hands among the group as to which statement they think is a lie.
    • 3
      Ask the person to reveal the correct answer. The people who guessed correctly should mark a tally on their sheets for a correct guess.
    • 4
      Continue around the room, having each person read his statement and then conducting a vote. Participants should continue marking down each time they make a correct guess.
    • 5
      Ask everyone how many correct guesses they had once everyone has read their statements. The person with the most correct guesses at the end has won the game.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Writing a Dramatic Scene---Format

For those of you who have finished typing your poetry and short stories, here is a sampe of how to write a dramatic scene and the format.


THE SNOW DAY
By Elise Williams

Cast of Characters:
SUSAN, a friendly, 30-something mother
JANE, her 13 year old daughter
CHLOE, Jane’s best friend, also 13 years old
SAM, Susan’s husband and Jane’s father, worried about work
JOE, a 13 year old neighbor of Jane, sometimes teases her

By Beth Levin
  Setting:
The play takes place in a suburb of Boston during a particularly snowy day when schools are unexpectedly closed.

ACT I
SCENE 1
Stage Directions are messages in parentheses, aligned to the right margin, from the playwright to the actors and crew telling them what to do and how to do it. They should be brief, and written in the present tense. They describe action and visuals, not inner thoughts. Character names are written in ALL CAPS.

For example:
(Early morning, snow falling. Sidewalk in front of a suburban house. JANE appears in front of the house bundled up for winter weather and wearing a backpack. SUSAN comes out of the house and runs to catch JANE.)

SUSAN
Jane, wait! The radio just announced that your school is closed today because of snow!

JANE
Really? You’re not just teasing me, are you? Do I really get a snow day?

(CHLOE enters, also wearing a backpack, and walks over towards JANE.)

CHLOE
Hi Jane, what’s going on? Aren’t we walking to school together today?

               
Conclusion: Notice in the format above that the character’s names are ALL CAPS, bolded, and centered just before each character’s line of dialogue. Stage directions are at the beginning of a scene and anywhere else where action, props, or descriptions need to be explained for the cast and crew.