Through the college board's web site, you have access to samples of previous years' essay questions, scoring guides, and other useful information.
Click here to access sample questions and scoring guidelines for the AP exam in English literature.
A blog for English IV students at Phoenix Country Day School to think, create, write about, and understand British literature and the history of the English language.
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Monday, December 10, 2007
Elements of Prose Style
Actually two lists, which we discussed briefly in the first week, while looking at Jane Austen's style:
First, the elements of Fiction, as defined by novelist and critic E. M. Forster in his book Aspects of the Novel:
Plot--including not only WHAT happens, but WHY
Characterization--including who the characters are and how we come to know them better
Setting--the effect of time and place on the nature of the action and its effects on the characters
Point of View--First person retrospective, third person limited omniscient, fully omniscient--what are the advantages of a particular point of view to the effect the writer wishes to achieve
Theme--the social, cultural, philosophical or psychological ideas contained in the writing; in the fullest sense, what the story is about.
Second, the aspects of prose style, which apply to fiction and non-fiction, essays, stories, editorials, letters, blogs, journalism, and all prose writing:
Syntax
Organization
Language
Imagery
Diction
Detail
Irony
Point of View
Tone
Of these, often tone is seen as the most important, as it contains our understanding of the writer's attitude toward the subject or topic of the piece of writing. Therefore, the others on the list are often viewed as tools or techniques employed by writers to aid in communicating and controlling the overall tone.
First, the elements of Fiction, as defined by novelist and critic E. M. Forster in his book Aspects of the Novel:
Plot--including not only WHAT happens, but WHY
Characterization--including who the characters are and how we come to know them better
Setting--the effect of time and place on the nature of the action and its effects on the characters
Point of View--First person retrospective, third person limited omniscient, fully omniscient--what are the advantages of a particular point of view to the effect the writer wishes to achieve
Theme--the social, cultural, philosophical or psychological ideas contained in the writing; in the fullest sense, what the story is about.
Second, the aspects of prose style, which apply to fiction and non-fiction, essays, stories, editorials, letters, blogs, journalism, and all prose writing:
Syntax
Organization
Language
Imagery
Diction
Detail
Irony
Point of View
Tone
Of these, often tone is seen as the most important, as it contains our understanding of the writer's attitude toward the subject or topic of the piece of writing. Therefore, the others on the list are often viewed as tools or techniques employed by writers to aid in communicating and controlling the overall tone.
Sunday, December 9, 2007
NEW ! ! !
I was having coffee with a friend of mine (a former student), telling her about our blogworld, and she said I should put links to all your blogs on my blog.
So I did. Now, when you want to comment on others' blogs, you can get there directly from my blog. (Thanks, Sophie: "She approaches; she is nigh.")
Ain't blogworld grand?
LCC
So I did. Now, when you want to comment on others' blogs, you can get there directly from my blog. (Thanks, Sophie: "She approaches; she is nigh.")
Ain't blogworld grand?
LCC
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