Cette leçon contient 36 diapositives, avec quiz interactifs, diapositives de texte et 1 vidéo.
Éléments de cette leçon
Slide 1 - Diapositive
How old was Maureen Daly when she wrote 16?
A
15
B
16
C
25
D
34
Slide 2 - Quiz
What does the girl say at the beginning of her story that foreshadows?
A
That she likes fashion
B
That according to Stalin the future lies in women
C
That she is very good at ice skating
D
That she is not dumb
Slide 3 - Quiz
Why is that important?
A
Because she feels silly for thinking he felt like she did
B
So the reader will believe her
C
Because she was hurt and felt sorry for herself
D
Because was a very smart and indepedent girl
Slide 4 - Quiz
Slide 5 - Diapositive
Slide 6 - Diapositive
Slide 7 - Diapositive
Slide 8 - Diapositive
Slide 9 - Diapositive
Slide 10 - Diapositive
Conflict
External: Gideon vs the scientists
Internal: Choosing between being loyal to you heritage vs loyal to your master
Slide 11 - Diapositive
Themes
Relationships: how power and social order is dependent on skin colour
Culturaldifferences . Ex: native herbal medicine vs the whites science. Teddy's potential blindnes is symbolic of the blindnes of the South African whites towards the natives.
Growing up and growing apart-> Teddy and Gideon
Trust: how power affects relationships
Slide 12 - Diapositive
What is the importance of money in the story
A
it determines who is in charge and who is not
B
It is the yardstick for whites to value and appreciate everything
C
it is secretly wanted by publicly frowned upon
D
it is motivation of all that goes on at the Farquar´s farm
Slide 13 - Quiz
Why did Gideon and Teddy´s friendship grow distant?
A
Because he had called the small Piccanin only a black boy
B
Because the parents did not approve of it
C
Because Gideon refused to share the medicine plant
D
Because the boy was growing up, so it was inevitable
Slide 14 - Quiz
What conclusion did the scientist draw from his research in the homestead?
A
That the natives would never share their true wisdom with him
B
He was proved right again; there was no magic medicine
C
That the blue flowers were effective afterall
D
That he could make a lot of money out of Gideon's medicine
Slide 15 - Quiz
Why does Gideon look at Teddy sadly at the end of the story?
Slide 16 - Question ouverte
Indian Camp by Ernest Hemingway
Slide 17 - Diapositive
Slide 18 - Vidéo
Which word would express the theme of the story best?
Slide 19 - Question ouverte
"He was feeling exalted an talkative as football players in the dressing-room after a game" is meant to convey:
A
the relief after some anxious moments
B
the supremacy of the white man's culture
C
the masculinity of the scene
D
the self gratification of Nick's father
Slide 20 - Quiz
Why don't we learn father's name?
A
It helps to focus on George's experience
B
It puts him at the centre of the story
C
It puts him on a level with the Indians
D
It emphasizes his role of teaching Nick something
Slide 21 - Quiz
Which two counterpoints hug the central theme?
A
the Caesarean and the suicide
B
the cold night and the bowl of boiling water
C
the father and George
D
the shanty and the cold open air
Slide 22 - Quiz
What is ironic here: "'Ought to have a look at the proud father. They're usually the worst sufferers in these little affairs,' the doctor said. 'I must say he took it all pretty quietly'"?
Slide 23 - Question ouverte
The Bucket and the Rope
TF Powys
Slide 24 - Diapositive
The bucket and the rope are
A
antagonists
B
personifications
C
part of the Dorset setting
D
insturments of death
Slide 25 - Quiz
How far were Mr Dendy and Betty apart in age?
A
5 years
B
9 years
C
11 years
D
14 years
Slide 26 - Quiz
Why does that matter?
Slide 27 - Question ouverte
Why can't the bucket and the rope understand Mr Dendy's suicide
Slide 28 - Question ouverte
What is ironic about their perspective?
A
though they think they are wise, they lack understanding
B
though they mean well, they help to kill Mr Dendy
C
they don't understand what flowers symbolise
D
they think Bette is a sweet and innocent girl
Slide 29 - Quiz
Graham Greene
Slide 30 - Diapositive
The perspective is of particular importance in this story. Why?
Slide 31 - Question ouverte
The narrator changes his mind about which initial observation?
A
That her first book will be successful
B
That he will pay for the chablis
C
That the boy and girl seem similar in appearance and character
D
That the Japanese gentlemen are not as interesting
Slide 32 - Quiz
What role does her beauty play?
A
It helps to set off the boy's ordinariness
B
It feeds the idea that it is why her publisher 'believes' in her
C
It amplifies her talent and charisma
D
It is the reason the narrator is observing her
Slide 33 - Quiz
What belongs to whom?
weakness
Strength
mother
uncle
experience
powers of observation
Slide 34 - Question de remorquage
Why does he secretly hope the Chelsea Set will fail?