Tuesday, November 25, 2014

TODAY IN CLASS
Work on what Chaucer expects to accomplish for each pilgrim.  Students copied the following into their notes, duplicated here for future reference:
Now, in your own notes, you should keep track of the details the narrator reveals about each traveler:
·       profession/job [both Chaucer’s term and modern
 term/description]
·       general physical appearance
·       clothing/attire
·       other accessories that are mentioned
·       chief character traits and how we know
·       does the narrator seem to approve or disapprove? 
do we believe him (sincerity vs. satire)
·       anything else that seems important for a particular
pilgrim?



We worked quite a while with the Knight--finished with him, but did not get on to the Squire and Yeoman.  We will work with  them tomorrow.

AND also

FOR TOMORROW
Read about the Nun (the Prioress), pp. 148-149, lines 121-166.
Take notes, paying attention to the elements listed above (and in your own notes!)

Monday, November 24, 2014

Oh, my, catching up with the blog.  There are several things to be aware of:

1) The Beowulf essay was due online Thursday night (Nov. 20) and the hard copy was due in class on Friday, Nov. 21.  One-day extension papers were due today (class copy--get it online before midnight).  Two-day extension work is due tomorrow.

2) There was a Study Guide for Chaucer-related material that was checked off for completion on Friday.

TODAY IN CLASS
We talked about several of the more commonly missed questions (1, 3, 5), discussed different kinds of pilgrimages, learned a few things about bubonic/pneumonic plague (based in part on a current outbreak:  Plague Outbreak in Madagascar ), and added information about Henry II's friction with Becket.
Know the usual translation (from French) of the king's fateful words:  "Will no one rid me of this meddlesome priest?"  Sadly, King Henry did not mean for his exasperated outburst to be taken literally by his over-eager barons.

FOR TOMORROW
We'll get into the descriptions of the pilgrims.  For tomorrow, read carefully the material on the Knight, the Squire, and the Yeoman.  Starting on p. 146 in the section linked to this post, read lines 43-121.
Prologue to the Canterbury Tales

Monday, November 17, 2014

Upcoming Major Assignments and Tests
Beowulf Essay--assigned Friday, Nov. 14  Beowulf Essay: Topics Hand-Out
Due Thursday night, Nov. 20 on turnitin.com; hard copy in class on Friday

Additional information:   Supplemental Instructions for Beowulf Essay
You don't need to print this out; you'll receive a hard copy tomorrow in class.

TODAY IN CLASS
I checked (almost) everyone's progress and answered basic questions.  If you were absent today, I'll check you off tomorrow.  If I didn't GET to you today (a few people in 2nd and 5th), I will also check you off tomorrow.

FOR TOMORROW
Only homework tonight through Thursday will be to work on the essay.
We will move forward with new reading/discussion starting tomorrow in class.


Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Class Instructions for Wednesday, Nov. 12

MONDAY IN CLASS--if you were absent
Please get a hand-out from Monday.  Read it tonight. Mark in the margin the sections that have something to do with the Beowulf epic poem or the figure of Beowulf himself.  Be sure to bring it with you tomorrow and we'll move on to the next step.

Instructions for today, WEDNESDAY, Nov. 12

1. Get your big lit books.

2. Read pp. 28-33. (Yes, that's back to the beginning, it seems, but remember that your book chunks the Anglo-Saxon and Medieval sections together).

Now--double back just to the section on pp. 28-30.  For this part you can you can use a phone or one of the class computers.

3. Find out FIVE MORE FACTS about FOUR of the terms /people in bold, just for 28-30. Your goal: quality, useful facts.

4.  You must make a hand-written list of your five facts for each term--NOT a computer print-out.
  • Write the term/word and underline it, and below it write out the five additional informative facts. 
  • Then go through the same process for the second , third, and fourth item
     These are due at the end of class.  If you do not finish, TURN IN WHAT YOU HAVE





Wednesday, November 5, 2014

TODAY IN CLASS
Beowulf Rap Videos--
1st period had to finish up
2nd/5th/ got to see one or two extra

Discussion of comitatus (yesterday's hand-out)--application to Beowulf
The most essential finding was that comitatus diminished as the epic went on

TOMORROW
The second Beowulf quiz--will emphasize the poem from where the last quiz left off (partway through the battle with Grendel's mother) to the end of the work. However, expect a few questions over material that applies to the work as a whole that might have been covered before, or even a few questions from the first part of the work.  Still--the main focus is on the last half.

Some basic places to review (see early October posts for links to the textbook . . .I'll try to re-link them here later on): 
Background on Beowulf—p. 36-37
Epic—p. 37 plus additional features such as the ritual boast, arming scene, catalogue (of warriors, foods at a feast, etc.), extended formal speeches, use of epic similes

epic from A Handbook to Literature:
                A long narrative poem in elevated style presenting characters of high position in
adventures forming an organic whole through their relation to a central heroic figure
 and through their development of episodes important to the history of a nation or race.
Common characteristics:
o    the hero is a figure of imposing stature, of national or international importance, and of great historical or legendary significance
o    the setting is vast, covering great nations, the world, or the universe
o    the action consists of deeds of great valor or requiring superhuman courage
o    supernatural forces—gods, angels, and demons—interest themselves in the action and intervene from time to time
o    a style of sustained elevation and grand simplicity
o    the epic poet recounts the deeds of the heroes with a measure of objectivity
(There follows a list of common conventions, but many apply more to “art” epics composed by a single known poet, not to “folk epics” of uncertain authorship.  I summarized the essential ones above.)

I don't plan to ask you specific questions about the additional epic features--we didn't stress these this year--BUT it's still "good to know" if you're one of those people who like to see how works fit into larger chunks of literature.

Additional terms (we've had these all along, with the exception of this week's new term comitatus)
ubi sunt formula:  a convention often used in poetry rhetorically asking “where are” (ubi sunt) particular things which, to the poet, represent an ideal—especially of times past (sort of the lost “golden age”).  The idea is often connected with observations about the transitory nature of human life, and the fact that things change (mutability).
scop bard/poet/storyteller, who often recited poetry to the accompaniment of a stringed
 instrument
wergild :     literally man-price, a form of victim’s compensation
comitatus:   the idea that everyone protects the king at all costs even if it means a warrior giving
            up his own life. If a king is killed, the warriors must avenge the death of the king or they
can no longer serve as warriors for the next king.
wyrd:   the concept of fate or destiny—but read more about it here:


Monday, November 3, 2014

An Oh-So-Late Blog Post--

But I think you know the drill.

Beowulf Raps tomorrow!!

We'll watch/listen to your creative videos--try to get them on the big desk computer before school.

In class, you'll turn in BOTH copies of the written product:

  • the plain unmarked version that I'll post
  • the highlighted, marked version (make sure to cover all the points listed)