Narratology

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    “All children mythologize their birth. It is a universal trait. You want to know someone? Heart, mind, and soul? Ask him to tell you about when he was born. What you get won’t be the truth; it will be a story. And nothing is more telling than a story.” – Vida Winter, Tales of Change and Desperation (Setterfield). The two novels The Thirteenth Tale, by Diane Setterfield, and Wuthering Heights, by Emily Bronte were written decades apart, yet they have similar elements. Wuthering Heights is a work of

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    Semester B Unit 1 Lesson 8 Introduction and Objective Every story has a plot. The plot consist of an exposition, rising action, climax, falling action and a resolution (or some call the denouement which means “end.”) How the author unfold the story plot is unique to each author. Understanding how a particular story unfolds is important in being able to comprehend the setting, theme, tone, mood and central ide(s) of the story. Today 's lesson objective is: • Students will be able to describe how

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    Sexuality has an inherent connection to human nature. Yet, even in regards to something so natural, societies throughout times have imposed expectations and gender roles upon it. Ultimately, these come to oppress women, and confine them within the limits that the world has set for them. However, society is constantly evolving, and within the past 200 years, the role of women has changed. These changes in society can be seen within the intricacies of literature in each era. Specifically, through

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    The Old Man And The Sea

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    Gustav Freytag, a famous German novelist and playwright, developed a well-known structure himself called Freytag’s Pyramid or dramatic structure. Freytag’s Pyramid is divided into five stages the exposition, the rising action, climax, falling action, and the denouement. Each one of the stages describe the different parts of novels and short stories. Ernest Hemingway author of “Hills Like White Elephants” and other works, such as, “A Farewell to Arms” and “The Old Man and the Sea” has made many accomplishments

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    Happy Endings is an oddly structured, metafictional story; a series of possible scenarios all leading the characters to the same ending. Atwood uses humour and practical wisdom to critique both romantic fiction and contemporary society, and to make the point that it is not the end that is important, it is the journey that truly matters in both life and writing. Metafiction is fiction that deals, often playfully and self-referentially, with the writing of fiction or its conventions (website 1)

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    University of Phoenix Material Exploring Rhetorical Modes Rhetorical Modes Worksheet Chart Complete the following worksheet on rhetorical modes for academic essays using the information shared in “Use Effective Methods of Development” in The Everyday Writer Plus. Rhetorical Mode Explain in your own words (using complete sentences) when a writer would use this mode. Narrative Narrative is telling a story to someone with a lot of detail. Description Description writing paints a picture with

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    Framework in The Goophered Grapevine The frame narrative in Charles W. Chesnutt's The Goophered Grapevine creates a hidden tension between the viewpoints of the internal narrator's voice and the voice of the external narrator. Uncle Julius McAdoo is Chesnutt's internal narrator, and serves a storyteller in the story. He exemplifies the characteristics of a former slave such as being uneducated and unable to speak Standard English. Julius is old, poor, and uneducated. These characteristics set

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    Gilded six bits Essay

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    “The Gilded Six-Bits” Response 1. The story is written as a single continuous narrative, but the events take place over a long period of time. Estimate how much time actually passes between the beginning of the story and end. I would say that the story had to take place probably between nine to ten months. I arrived at this conclusion from information given in the story. Such as I drew from the fact that after being caught with Otis D. Slemmons, Missie May and Joe had not touched in three months

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    The Inaccessible Inner Life of “Wakefield” “All these—all the meanness and agony without end I sitting looking out upon, See, hear, and am silent.” –Walt Whitman We are presented with a piece of gossip of a man named Wakefield who leaves his wife for twenty years to live in a house the next street over. If this story were workshopped in a present-day fiction writing class, it would be argued that this story has interesting elements but is not, as a whole, an interesting story--

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    Essay on The Study of Existents in Sandpiper

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    The Study of Existents in Sandpiper In a short story like "Sandpiper", where the protagonist does little except move around in her beach-house in an uneventful afternoon, thinking her thoughts, readers must look for an attraction alternative to the plot. Indeed, the writer, Ahdaf Soueif, has chosen to offer to us an interesting array of existents, in place of the story line, as the main focus of this narrative. In the following essay, I shall discuss how existents--the collection of characters

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