11/22/2009

11 ways to spice up your intro!

1. Biographical Information: Ambrose Pierce was in the Northern Army, yet in Occurence at Owl's Creek he takes the point of view of a confederate to express the negative side of war / the horror of war for everyone

2. Quotes : In Edgar Allan Poe's The Tell-Tale Heart: ''I am not mad ; no, not me''. Why did the narrator say this? Was he really mad? Explores the fine line between madness and sanity from the perspective of the antagonist.

3. Definition: According to the dictionnary, a lotery is a random draw with money as the prize. In Sally Jackson's The Lottery, the prize is indeed very macabre, but is not money.

4. A Litterary Element: Imagery is a powerful way to express feelings and emotions In L. Allan's Strange Fruit, there are many visual images to show the tragredy of lynching.


5. Life Experience of the Author: Ernest Hemingway had a lot of problems communicating throughout his life. This is reflected in Hills Like White Elephants, when Jig and the American, have problems communicating.

6. Plot: In O.Wilde's The Nightingale and the Rose, the bird his heartbroken by the students pain. By the end of the story, the Nightingale heart's is literally broken, as it is pierced by a thorn.

7. Philisophical (Socialogical) Concepts : Racism has always existed and will always exist, particularly towards people of other skin colors. In L.Hughes I, too, sing America, denounces rasism and delivers a message of hope.

8. Historical Background: Romanticism was in vogue in the early nineteenth century. It extolled the beauty of nature and denounced science and the industrial revolution. In P.B. Shelly's Ozymandias nature corrodes the statue of Ramses II which represents power.

9. Claim to fame: notoriety: J.D. Salinger's Catcher in the Rye was written in 1951, yet still today it is read in almost every literature course.

10. Allusion: (Reference to past works) Many great works use the context to a trial to express a universal message. These include Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird, Rose's Twelve Angry Men, and Arthur Miller's The Crucible.

11. Using Imagery: "A painting for the painter is what the novel is for the writer. The authors of all genres face endless possibilities when shaping the canvas of their work." X. Tam

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