3. Part I Chapter I

Goals for today 
Homework check links you have made
Groups of 4 for close analysis 
Start constructing a character profile for Winston 
Consider point of view and free indirect discourse 
 

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EngelsUpper Secondary (Key Stage 4)GCSE

This lesson contains 20 slides, with interactive quiz, text slides and 1 video.

Items in this lesson

Goals for today 
Homework check links you have made
Groups of 4 for close analysis 
Start constructing a character profile for Winston 
Consider point of view and free indirect discourse 
 

Slide 1 - Slide

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Merel 
Andriy
Charlotte 
Catherina 
Louie 
Samuel 
Constance 
Roos 

Manuel
Huub 
Quirine 
Zoe
Francesco
Tashifa 
Sikander 
Cecilia


Slide 2 - Slide

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Reading requirements in MB 


Read to the end of chapter IV for Wednesday 17th April 
Read to the end of chapter VI for Thursday 18th April 
Read to the end of Part One for 6th May (after the holiday) 

Slide 3 - Slide

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Read and listen to the opening of chapter 1 
Be aware of the structure of the novel. 
Three parts 
Part 1= VIII chapters 
Part 2 = X chapters 
Part 3 = VI chapters 
Appendix = The Principles of Newspeak
 
Write a 20 word summary of chapter I Part One. 

Slide 4 - Slide

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Slide 5 - Link

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Example 20 word summary chapter I 
Winston Smith is a citizen controlled by an all powerful government which crushes rebellion, but he begins a secret diary.​

What was the most disconcerting aspect of Part One Chapter I of 1984? Give a reason for your reaction. 

Slide 6 - Slide

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Close analysis exposition 
In your groups, you will be given a paragraph to focus on​
Identify​: 

  • Elements of dystopian fiction​
  • Interesting linguistic choices​
  • Interesting structural choices​
  • Questions that you have as readers​
Write your findings in your class notebook. 
timer
1:00

Slide 7 - Slide

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Slide 8 - Slide

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Read the rest of the chapter and, in your groups, begin to complete a comprehensive character profile of Winston that will apply to Part One​
Inside the gingerbread man, write down any of Winston’s physical characteristics and personality traits, as well as his attitudes to significant aspects of his world​
Outside of the gingerbread man, write down any significant points relating to his physical surroundings or environment, as well as any relationships he has formed​

Slide 9 - Slide

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Goals for today 
Planning and practice extract analysis 
Integrating AWL  in your work 
words and phrases in chapter 1 
Consider point of view and free indirect discourse 
New character introduction 


 

Slide 10 - Slide

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Extract analysis practice plan
  • In MB => files=> paper 1 folder and in Teams => content library => paper 1
  • Generic guiding questions 
  • graphic organiser for planning 
  • Take no more than 20 minutes 
  • Take an extract from our current novel or one of your choice 
  • Extract no longer than 30 lines 
  • Plan a response including thesis statement, topic sentences and evidence. 

Slide 11 - Slide

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Slide 12 - Link

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AWL

Slide 13 - Slide

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Protagonist 
Anger
Diary symbolism
Hypocrite
Relationships 
Misogyny 
Leg ulcer symbolism 
Anti-hero 
Irony 
Poverty 
For each of these words or phrases discuss, in your groups,  how they are shown in chapter I and how they contribute to the main message (theme)  or concept of that chapter. 

Slide 14 - Slide

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Protagonist 
Anger
Diary symbolism
Hypocrite
Relationships 
Misogyny 
Leg ulcer symbolism 
Anti-hero 
Irony 
Poverty 
Write in your class notebook your findings for each word or phrase. 

Slide 15 - Slide

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Long written response
Answer this question in one paragraph using evidence (textual references/quotes) as necessary. 

In chapter I, how has Orwell built a convincing dystopian world?  

Slide 16 - Slide

Protagonist – memory is integral – “London had always been like this”​
Anger – jealousy, state of need, frustration, violence ​
Diary symbolises a private rebellion, remaining true to own soul, escape​
Hypocrite – purely private​
Discontent​
Relationships are brief and distant connections​
Parsons – dismissive​
O’Brian – connection imagined? ​
Misogyny – Orwell or character?​
Ulcer – repression, poverty, rot​
‘Smallish and frail’ – anti-hero​
‘Ministry of Truth’ – ironic​
Gin, dark hunk of bread, cigarettes - poverty
Orwell's techniques
  • Description mainly focussed on setting
  • All the senses are appealed to in the descriptive imagery
  • Characterisation of the girl from the fiction department and O’Brien are symbolic of certain ways of being in this society. 
  • Third person narration
  • Use of free indirect discourse (speech) 
  • Link to contextual knowledge that the readers would recognise - London after the 2nd WW
  • Elements of satire - making a recognisable political point 
free indirect discourse describes moments in a third-person narrative when the narrator becomes 'infected' by the perspective of one of its characters. The third-person narration drops into one of the characters internal perspectives. 
adapted: Raymond Malewitz Oregon State University 

Slide 17 - Slide

Protagonist – memory is integral – “London had always been like this”​
Anger – jealousy, state of need, frustration, violence ​
Diary symbolises a private rebellion, remaining true to own soul, escape​
Hypocrite – purely private​
Discontent​
Relationships are brief and distant connections​
Parsons – dismissive​
O’Brian – connection imagined? ​
Misogyny – Orwell or character?​
Ulcer – repression, poverty, rot​
‘Smallish and frail’ – anti-hero​
‘Ministry of Truth’ – ironic​
Gin, dark hunk of bread, cigarettes - poverty

Slide 18 - Video

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Why does so little happen in Chapter I?​

Slide 19 - Open question

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Slide 20 - Slide

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