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The Formal Literary Analysis

The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

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Page 1: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

The Formal Literary Analysis

Page 2: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

STEP ONE:Open GENERALLY

with a start-up technique

(Attention Grabber!)

Page 3: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

START-UP TECHNIQUES

QUICK BURSTSQUOTES

SURPRISE/CONTRASTS

POWERFULFACTS

LITALLUSIONS

Page 4: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

QUICK BURSTS

-A series of short, direct statements

Love. Empathy. Acceptance. Three words that describe elements every teenager desires. In Paul Zindel’s The Pigman, one of his protagonists, Lorraine, is looking for these three things when she befriends a lonely man named Mr. Pignati…

Page 5: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

QUOTES

-A quote opening (relevant quotations either from someone famous or from the novel)

George Orwell once wrote that “Happiness can exist only in acceptance.” Although Orwell lived before the time period The Pigman was written, his words portray one of the main themes that occurs throughout the novel…

Page 6: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

SURPRISE/CONTRASTS

-Surprise/Contrast Opening (Hyperbole) (startwith something that goes against what most think)

When reading for their English teachers, high school students ALWAYS find the life lessons in the novels, and consequently, finish a book a better person and more prepared for lifeʼs journey. Of course, this may be somewhat of a stretch, but when reading Paul Zindel’s The Pigman…

Page 7: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

LIT ALLUSIONS

-Literary Allusion (refer to well-known piece of literature)

Many well-read individuals may believe that Ponyboy Curtis from S.E. Hinton’s The Outsiders goes through the greatest coming of age story. Paul Zindel’s The Pigman, however, also makes a claim at a great coming of age story.

Page 8: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

STEP ONE:Open GENERALLY with a start-up

technique(Attention Grabber!)

STEP TWO:Discuss start-up and smoothly link to

book (mention author, title, and character’s full name)

STEP THREE:STATE PAPER’S THESIS!

Page 9: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

George Orwell once wrote that “Happiness can exist only in acceptance.” Although Orwell lived before the time period The Pigman was written, his words portray one of the main themes that occurs throughout the novel. In The Pigman, by Paul Zindel, one of the protagonists, Lorraine Benson, is a typical teenager who is looking for acceptance. Lorraine befriends Mr. Pignati, a lonely man, because she finally begins to feel love, acceptance, and empathy.

Begins broad & general!

STEP

2

THESIS! Whole paper must follow…

Page 10: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

BODY PARAGRAPHS

Body paragraphs are the place where support is given to win your

argument.

Page 11: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

REMINDER:

TOPIC SENTENCE CONTROLS

EACH PARAGRAPH’S CONTENT!

Page 12: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

One of the many reasons Lorraine becomes friends with Mr. Pignati is that she is looking for parental love that she does not receive from her mother. This is evident when the group goes to Beekman’s and skates out of the store. She explains skating out of the store is “something that let [her] be a child in a way [she] never could be with [her] mother” (Zindel 87).

This paragraph discusses why Lorraine became friends with Mr. Pignati ONLY!

(and, of course, proof of the claim)

Don’t forget the in-text citations with your support.

Page 13: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

REMINDER:

DEVELOPMENT IS WHAT’S

AFTER THE SUPPORT; IT’S HOW

YOU EXPLAIN AND USE THE

SUPPORT THAT PROVES YOUR

THESIS!

Page 14: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

One of the many reasons Lorraine becomes friends with Mr. Pignati is that she is looking for parental love that she does not receive from her mother. This is evident when the group goes to Beekman’s and skates out of the store. She explains skating out of the store is “something that let [her] be a child in a way [she] never could be with [her] mother” (Zindel 87). Mr. Pignati buys items for John and Lorraine and allows them to do as they like. Both of these qualities are missing from their homes. For Lorraine especially, she is able to let her guard down and be herself with Mr. Pignati, not having to worry about being lectured or being ordered to do chores. Due to Mr. Pignati’s kindness and love, Lorraine finds herself befriending the lonely man.

Development = writer’s thoughts on support and what it proves!

Page 15: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

REMINDER:

USE IMPRESSIVE

TRANSITIONAL WORDS AND

PHRASES

Page 16: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

One of the many reasons Lorraine becomes friends with Mr. Pignati is that she is looking for parental love that she does not receive from her mother. This is evident when the group goes to Beekman’s and skates out of the store. She explains skating out of the store is “something that let [her] be a child in a way [she] never could be with [her] mother” (Zindel 87). Mr. Pignati buys items for John and Lorraine and allows them to do as they like. Both of these qualities are missing from their homes. For Lorraine especially, she is able to let her guard down and be herself with Mr. Pignati, not having to worry about being lectured or being ordered to do chores. Due to Mr. Pignati’s kindness and love, Lorraine finds herself befriending the lonely man.Yay, smooth sounding transition words!

Page 17: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

REMINDER:

REMEMBER - WHEN

DISCUSSING

LITERATURE, USE PRESENT

TENSE!

Page 18: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

One of the many reasons Lorraine becomes friends with Mr. Pignati is that she is looking for parental love that she does not receive from her mother. This is evident when the group goes to Beekman’s and skates out of the store. She explains skating out of the store is “something that let [her] be a child in a way [she] never could be with [her] mother” (Zindel 87). Mr. Pignati buys items for John and Lorraine and allows them to do as they like. Both of these qualities are missing from their homes. For Lorraine especially, she is able to let her guard down and be herself with Mr. Pignati, not having to worry about being lectured or being ordered to do chores. Due to Mr. Pignati’s kindness and love, Lorraine finds herself befriending the lonely man.

“No ‘ed’ ending verbs and no ‘was + verbs’!”

Page 19: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

REMINDER:

END BODY PARAGRAPHS WITH

A REMINDER OR REFERENCE

BACK TO YOUR PAPER’S

THESIS!

Page 20: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

One of the many reasons Lorraine becomes friends with Mr. Pignati is that she is looking for parental love that she does not receive from her mother. This is evident when the group goes to Beekman’s and skates out of the store. She explains skating out of the store is “something that let [her] be a child in a way [she] never could be with [her] mother” (Zindel 87). Mr. Pignati buys items for John and Lorraine and allows them to do as they like. Both of these qualities are missing from their homes. For Lorraine especially, she is able to let her guard down and be herself with Mr. Pignati, not having to worry about being lectured or being ordered to do chores. Due to Mr. Pignati’s kindness and love, Lorraine finds herself befriending the lonely man.

“Back to the whole focus of paper.”

Page 21: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

REMINDER:

NEXT BODY PARAGRAPH - DO

IT ALL OVER AGAIN!

(TOPIC, SUPPORT, DEVELOP,...)

Page 22: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

CONCLUSIONS

Step 1 - Briefly summarize your

points/reasons & thesis!

Step 2 - Make a reference or tie back to your start-up technique! “End

where you started.” (FRAMED NARRATIVE)

Page 23: The Formal Literary Analysis. STEP ONE: Open GENERALLY with a start-up technique (Attention Grabber!)

Lorraine befriends a lonely man in part because she feels lonely. She finally begins to feel accepted through the love that Mr. Pignati shows her. They share empathy, both knowing how hard it is to be alone in the world. Before meeting, both were unhappy, but once Lorraine met Mr. Pignati she realized that “Happiness can exist only in acceptance,” as George Orwell stated. By the end of the novel, she was finally able to accept herself and her mother and achieve true happiness.

Quick summary - nothing too intense or detailed!

Makes references back to intro!