Wednesday, February 15, 2006
Notes from Quiz Creation Day
Greetings Bardolitors...here's the joint:
1) Anagnorisis--means recognition, also the word Aristotle uses in "Poetics" to convey this change for a character.
2) Bondage--figurative or metaphorical--also see Gretchen's lecture on MOV Bonds.
3) Bias--lawn bowling, or the natural curviture of the Earth, also a character's POV.
4) Shylock's aversions--music, et al.
5) Shylock's--"my daughter, my ducats..."
6) "RING"--the last word in MOV
7) Green World--Who is responsible for this theme? Frye. What happens when characters emerge from this world? Baptismal.
8) "THREES" in MOV
9) Senex--the blocking figures--see FRYE p.317
10) Heteronormative--Shakespeare playing with gender conventions.
11) Genre?--exists due to expectations of type. "A man walks into a bar..."
12) 4 Humours of the body--Blood, Phlegm, Yellow Bile, Black Bile.
13) Pound of Flesh
14) Possession in MOV.
15) Blazon--means cataloguing women's features, usually in a possessive manner, i.e. Petrarch's sonnet conventions
16) Prefatory material from MOV and 12th.
17) Study Guest Lecturers Presentations
18) Mythic Realm vs. Reality
19) 12th Night refers to what? 12 days after Christmas festival--epipham?
20) Definitions of Sonnets--problem/resolution, Iambic Pentameter, Types, Rhyme Scheme
abab, cdcd, efef, GG.
This is all the material from the chalk board. Keep in mind regonition scenes, key stuff I'm guessing.
"Break a Leg" everyone. See ya there.
1) Anagnorisis--means recognition, also the word Aristotle uses in "Poetics" to convey this change for a character.
2) Bondage--figurative or metaphorical--also see Gretchen's lecture on MOV Bonds.
3) Bias--lawn bowling, or the natural curviture of the Earth, also a character's POV.
4) Shylock's aversions--music, et al.
5) Shylock's--"my daughter, my ducats..."
6) "RING"--the last word in MOV
7) Green World--Who is responsible for this theme? Frye. What happens when characters emerge from this world? Baptismal.
8) "THREES" in MOV
9) Senex--the blocking figures--see FRYE p.317
10) Heteronormative--Shakespeare playing with gender conventions.
11) Genre?--exists due to expectations of type. "A man walks into a bar..."
12) 4 Humours of the body--Blood, Phlegm, Yellow Bile, Black Bile.
13) Pound of Flesh
14) Possession in MOV.
15) Blazon--means cataloguing women's features, usually in a possessive manner, i.e. Petrarch's sonnet conventions
16) Prefatory material from MOV and 12th.
17) Study Guest Lecturers Presentations
18) Mythic Realm vs. Reality
19) 12th Night refers to what? 12 days after Christmas festival--epipham?
20) Definitions of Sonnets--problem/resolution, Iambic Pentameter, Types, Rhyme Scheme
abab, cdcd, efef, GG.
This is all the material from the chalk board. Keep in mind regonition scenes, key stuff I'm guessing.
"Break a Leg" everyone. See ya there.