THE BLUE HOTEL

I have read and understood the story The Blue Hotel

If you haven't read the story, this is the moment to tell me. 
Go outside the classroom and start reading it.
You can come back once you have finished reading the story. Summarise the story to prove you have read it.


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Slide 1: Slide
EngelsMiddelbare schoolvwoLeerjaar 5

This lesson contains 16 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 50 min

Items in this lesson

I have read and understood the story The Blue Hotel

If you haven't read the story, this is the moment to tell me. 
Go outside the classroom and start reading it.
You can come back once you have finished reading the story. Summarise the story to prove you have read it.


Slide 1 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Summarise the story "The Blue Hotel" in 10 words (doesn't have to be a sentence)

Slide 2 - Open question

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The first two pages show at least two clear examples of foreshadowing.
Identify them.

Slide 3 - Open question

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From the start the Swede is different; isolated.
Please prove this statement by quoting from the text.

Slide 4 - Open question

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On the first page two examples of personification can be found.
Quote them.
Why would the writer use personification here?

Slide 5 - Open question

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Scully tries to persuade The Swede to stay. In which two ways does he do so?

Slide 6 - Open question

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When Scully and The Swede rejoin the others, The Swede has changed.
- Quote at least two phrases that show him changed.
- What might have been the cause of this change?

Slide 7 - Open question

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At the very end the Easterner and the cowboy talk about guilt.
Who’s to blame for the Swede’s death according to the Easterner?
According to the cowboy?
What do their views represent?

Slide 8 - Open question

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Literary Analysis
Storyline, when, how much time, where, setting
Narrator
Theme
Plot
Main characters
Motifs, symbols, allusions
Mood

Slide 9 - Slide

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Storyline

Slide 10 - Open question

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Narrator

Slide 11 - Open question

the story is told from a limited omniscient third-person narrator point of view.
Theme

Slide 12 - Open question

The Weakness of Public Morality
Good vs Evil
Loss of Innocence
Fear of nature
Plot

Slide 13 - Open question

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Main characters

Slide 14 - Open question

Young Goodman Brown - round
The Devil - flat
Faith - flat
Motifs, symbols, allusions

Slide 15 - Open question

Motifs - female purity, faith, light versus dark.
Symbols - Pink ribbon, staff, my catechism etc. see booklet p. 14-16
Allusion - snake - Fall of Man


Motif: is a distinctive repeating feature or idea; often, it helps develop other narrative (or literary) aspects such as theme or mood.
Motifs support the general theme.

Mood

Slide 16 - Open question

Dark and gloomy, foreboding "and may you find all well, when you come back."
"Dreary road, darkened by all the gloomiest tress of the forest"