To Kill a Mockingbird (1960)
The story takes place in rural Maycomb, Alabama, between the summer of 1933 and Halloween of 1935. The narrator is Jean Louise “Scout” Finch. Though her eyes we are introduced to life in her small town where the depression is hitting hard. We meet Scout’s brother, Jem; her father, lawyer Atticus Finch, whom the children address by his first name; and the family’s black cook, Calpurnia. We also meet Dill, a boy who spends summers with his aunt, the Finches’ next-door neighbor. Scout is almost six years old when the story begins, her brother almost 10.
The novel employs a first person narrator. This narrator is not the young child telling the story as it happens, but rather an adult remembering events of her childhood. This technique allows the older narrator to present herself whenever necessary to supply information that the child narrator could not have known at the time or to comment on the action.
Scout, Jem, and Dill spend most of their first two summers together devising elaborate schemes to lure their neighbor, Boo Radley, out of his spooky house.
Bob Ewell, a shiftless and dishonest alcoholic whose family lives in a run-down old shack behind the garbage dump, accuses Tom Robinson, a black man, of raping his daughter Mayella. The town judge has assigned Atticus to defend Tom. Despite Atticus’s upstanding reputation, his neighbors have been hurling offensive remarks about him at his children because of his efforts to defend a black man.
The night before the trial Scout, Jem, and Dill watch Atticus confront a lynch mob in front of the town jail, where Tom Robinson is being held. The cowardly mob disperses when the three children appear and Scout begins talking to one of the men she knows.
After the jury delivers the verdict that everyone knows is a foregone conclusion, Bob Ewell, who feels that Atticus humiliated him on the witness stand, vows to get even. In the story’s dramatic climax, Jem and Scout are attacked on their way home from a Halloween pageant at the school. They are saved by the appearance of a man who carries the unconscious Jem home.
To Kill a Mockingbird is a double coming-of-age story involving both Jem and, to a lesser degree, Scout. In a way the novel is also a coming-of-age story about southern culture as it takes its first small step toward emerging from its racist past.
http://www.notesinthemargin.org/mockingbird.html
English I
Welcome to English I! Have you listened to the lyrics in the song "Unwritten" by Natasha Bedingfield? In the song Natasha sings: "Speak the words on your lips. Drench yourself in words unspoken. Live your life with arms wide open. Today is where your book begins. The rest is still unwritten." This is what I ask of you-no one but you can state what you are thinking or feeling. Your book is still unwritten. Write! Share! Express! Write some more!
Tuesday, April 1, 2008
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
Thursday, January 31, 2008
Webinar
I attended Bethany's Webinar on "Engaging the Online Learner." This was fantasic! She has so many great ideas on how to get students involved in their own learning. You can still see this as an archived presentation on the RETA website.
There is a webinar coming up using Podcasting in your online classes. I hope to see more of you there!
Sandy
There is a webinar coming up using Podcasting in your online classes. I hope to see more of you there!
Sandy
Sunday, September 16, 2007
"Unwritten" by Natasha Bedingfield
Here are the complete lyrics to the song "Unwritten" by Natasha Bedingfield.
Remember-
Speak the words on your lips
Drench yourself in words unspoken
Live your life with arms wide open
Today is where your book begins
The rest is still unwritten
I love this song because it helps me see how we all have something to say. It also helps me understand that today is a new day with a "blank page" before me. I can write my day, my week, my life to be what I want it to be.
Your words are still unwritten. This is a new day with a blank page before you. What do you see for yourself? Where will you be tomorrow? Next week? In a year? Ten years? Post your reflections here!
Mrs. Johnson
Remember-
Speak the words on your lips
Drench yourself in words unspoken
Live your life with arms wide open
Today is where your book begins
The rest is still unwritten
I love this song because it helps me see how we all have something to say. It also helps me understand that today is a new day with a "blank page" before me. I can write my day, my week, my life to be what I want it to be.
Your words are still unwritten. This is a new day with a blank page before you. What do you see for yourself? Where will you be tomorrow? Next week? In a year? Ten years? Post your reflections here!
Mrs. Johnson
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