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LESSON 12 2.6 SHARED GIFTS: INTRODUCING IRONY PURPOSE -TO EXPLAIN HOW IMAGES SIGNIFY THE LITERAL AND SYMBOLIC IMPORTANCE OF OBJECTS TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF CHARACTERS - TO EXPLAIN HOW SITUATION IRONY CONTRIBUTES TO THE THEME OF “THE GIFT OF THE MAGI”

Lesson 12 2.6 Shared Gifts: Introducing Irony

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Lesson 12 2.6 Shared Gifts: Introducing Irony. Purpose -to explain how images signify the literal and symbolic importance of objects to the development of characters - To explain how situation irony contributes to the theme of “The Gift of the Magi”. Bell Ringer. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Lesson 12 2.6 Shared Gifts: Introducing Irony

LESSON 122.6 SHARED GIFTS:

INTRODUCING IRONYPURPOSE

-TO EXPLAIN HOW IMAGES SIGNIFY THE LITERAL AND SYMBOLIC IMPORTANCE OF OBJECTS TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF CHARACTERS

- TO EXPLAIN HOW SITUATION IRONY CONTRIBUTES TO THE THEME OF “THE GIFT OF THE MAGI”

Page 2: Lesson 12 2.6 Shared Gifts: Introducing Irony

BELL RINGER

• Define the following terms found on page 98• Tone• Irony• Allusion• Commentary (pg 104)• Textual commentary (pg 104)

Page 3: Lesson 12 2.6 Shared Gifts: Introducing Irony

ALLUSION EXAMPLES

“Don’t act like a Romeo in front of her.”

– “Romeo” is a reference to Shakespeare’s Romeo, a passionate lover of Juliet, in “Romeo and Juliet”.

The rise in poverty will unlock the Pandora’s box of crimes.

– This is an allusion to one of Greek Mythology’s origin myth, “Pandora’s box”.

“This place is like a Garden of Eden.”

–This is a biblical allusion to the “garden of God” in the Book of Genesis.

“Hey! Guess who the new Newton of our school is?”

– “Newton”, means a genius student, alludes to a famous scientist Isaac Newton.

“Stop acting like my ex-husband please.”

– Apart from scholarly allusions we refer to common people and places in our speech.

Page 4: Lesson 12 2.6 Shared Gifts: Introducing Irony

SKILLS: IRONY

Irony refers to a contrast between

_________________ and

____________.

More specifically, we have three types.

appearancereality

Page 5: Lesson 12 2.6 Shared Gifts: Introducing Irony

SITUATIONAL IRONY

Situational irony exists when an occurrence is

the ___________________ of what is expected.opposite

Page 6: Lesson 12 2.6 Shared Gifts: Introducing Irony

VERBAL IRONY

Verbal irony occurs when a person says one thing and

_______________________.Means another

Page 7: Lesson 12 2.6 Shared Gifts: Introducing Irony

DRAMATIC IRONYDramatic irony exists when the reader or audience knows something the

__________________________.Character does not know

Page 8: Lesson 12 2.6 Shared Gifts: Introducing Irony

SITUATIONAL

• How do we expect _______________ to end?• Choose a movie that uses situational irony. How is the ending of a

movie the opposite of what we expect?

Page 9: Lesson 12 2.6 Shared Gifts: Introducing Irony

VERBAL

• What is an example of one person saying something, but their meaning is different?

• Think of movies or every day life where this occurs.

Page 10: Lesson 12 2.6 Shared Gifts: Introducing Irony

DRAMATIC

• In __________________, we know that:• Pick a scary movie; how is dramatic irony at work in this movie?

Page 11: Lesson 12 2.6 Shared Gifts: Introducing Irony

DIFFUSING THE TEXTPREREADING DISCUSSION• Diffusing the text is a simple strategy. It is actually not that much different

than a double entry journal. The goal of diffusing the text is to break the text into smaller chunks in order to 1. discuss the text 2. analyze the text and 3. acknowledge any confusion.

• We will read the first four paragraphs and highlight any words we do not know. We will try and figure out the words by context.

• Words we do not know might be references to people, places, or events in the Bible, mythology, or history. These allusions might be important to the Bible or to historical people, places, or events.

• As we read, we will diffuse the text and also answer the questions in the notes column.

Page 12: Lesson 12 2.6 Shared Gifts: Introducing Irony

SIFT

• The acronym SIFT stands for Symbol, Images, Figurative Language, and Tone or Theme. We can use this strategy to “sift” through the parts of a story in order to explore how a writer uses literary elements and stylistic techniques to convey meaning or theme. Identifying these elements is the key to helping us understand the author’s purpose and his commentary on life, the story’s theme.

• After reading, go back and scan examples of symbols, imagery, figurative language, and tone/theme, and complete the SIFT graphic organizer on page 104.

Page 13: Lesson 12 2.6 Shared Gifts: Introducing Irony

QUIZ NEXT CLASS• You will have a quiz next class over the story “Gift of a Magi.” Please make sure to review the

following terms before taking the quiz

• POV

• Imagery

• Symbols

• Irony

• Diction

• Tone

• Main Idea

• Theme

• Conflict (internal/external)