Thursday 3 October 2013

Blogging: Characters and Plot

Blog Post Options

Please choose one of the following three options and write a blog post on it. Every blog post should include:

  • a picture
  • a title
  • full sentences
  • labels
  • spell checked and proof read text

Blog Post Options (Choose 1 of the 3)


1. Profile one of you favourite characters from TV, literature, or videogames. Describe their character traits (personality) referencing at least one form of indirect characterization and saying how it is developed.
Example: 
Elizabeth Bennet in Pride and Prejudice is a girl who is very intelligent, as often mentioned by her father. Unfortunately  Elizabeth is a very judgmental girl. She makes decisions and assumes to understand people based on first impressions. Jane Austin develops Lizzy's judgmental character through Lizzy's behaviour when she  decides early on the Mr. Darcy is her enemy and Mr. Wickham is completely agreeable. When Mr. Darcy proposes to her, Lizzy cruelly rejects him.  In fact, Mr. Darcy turns out to be a caring person and Mr. Wickham is a scoundrel. 



2. Read a short story online (or recall a story you have read or viewed and enjoyed). Summarize the plot by saying what was the exposition, a few points from the rising action, what was the climax, and what was the falling action and/or denouement.
Example:
In the book the The Cat in the Hat the story starts with the exposition where the kids are home alone on a rainy day in the cat arrives. The rising action is when the cat plays games that cause a mess like “UP-UP-UP with a fish” and “FUN-IN-A-BOX.”  Fish says cat is causing a mess and says to him, “You should not be here / When our mother is not.” Then, Thing One and Thing Two fly kites in the house and  the Fish warns, “Your mother is on her way home!” The climax happens when the narrator catches Thing One and Thing Two with a net and says to the 
cat, “Now you pack up those Things / And you take them away!” The falling action is when the cat packs up Thing One and Thing Two then leaves. The cat returns and cleans up the mess saying, “I always pick up all my playthings.” The resolution is when the mother returns from shopping and asks the children, “Did you have any fun?” (from Read, Write, Think)


3. Write a narrative paragraph where you create a character. Describe your character using direct and indirect characterization. At the end, show where you had the direct and indirect characterization.

Example
"She was a bold-looking girl of about twenty-seven, with thick dark hair, a freckled face, and swift, athletic movements. A narrow scarlet sash, emblem of the Junior Anti-Sex League, was wound several times around her waist of her overalls, just tightly enough to bring out the shapeliness of her hips."

Direct: bold-looking girl, athletic movements

Indirect: "emblem of the Junior Anti-Sex League, was wound several times around her waist of her overalls, just tightly enough to bring out the shapeliness of her hips" this is irony. It shows that she seems to be following the rules but she is a rebel. 

(This example is from  George Orwell's book, Nineteen Eighty-Four 12 please write your own character).


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