Download Jeopardy 4 - WordPress.com

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

List of unsolved problems in philosophy wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Frankenstein
Which
Age Is It?
Literary
Terms
More
Lit. Terms
Who Said
It?
1pt
1 pt
1 pt
1pt
1 pt
2 pt
2 pt
2pt
2pt
2 pt
3 pt
3 pt
3 pt
3 pt
3 pt
4 pt
4 pt
4pt
4 pt
4pt
5pt
5 pt
5 pt
5 pt
5 pt
 This
Greek god stole fire from
Zeus and bequeathed it to
mankind. The angry Zeus
punished him by chaining him to a
mountain top with his own
personal, liver-eating bird.
 Who is Prometheus?
 This
character is the first victim of
the monster whose fatal mistake
was namedropping.
 Who is William Frankenstein?
 This
character is adopted by the
Frankenstein family and is lovingly
called “cousin” by Victor, but is
happy to be his sister or wife when
the occasion arises.
 Who
is Elizabeth Lavenza?
 The
Acrtic
 Ingolstadt, Germany
 Geneva, Switzerland
 Scotland
 England
 What are the main settings of
Frankenstein?
 This
character is the last person to
see the creature and lets him get
away alive despite his promise to
kill it.
 Who
is Robert Walton?
 1798

through 1832
What are the dates of the
Romantic Period?
 These
hippy-like, lyrical poets
believed that nature is a force that
acts on the human mind. They
include authors such as William
Wordsworth, Lord Byron, Samuel
Taylor Coleridge, and William
Blake.
 Who are the Romantic poets?
 Literature,
such as Mary Shelley’s
Frankenstein, that is filled with terrific
images of the eerie and supernatural.
 What
is gothic?
 Did
you pay attention in history class?
This French term means let people do as
they please, and it refers to the nointerference governmental policy
during the Romantic Age that allowed
the rich to become richer and the poor
to become poorer.
 What is laissez faire?
A
major problem of the Industrial
Revolution during the Romantic
and Victorian Ages was ______.
 What
is small children getting stuck
in chimneys, aka child labor?
 The
literary device that an author
uses when he or she arranges
words or themes in a balanced,
similar structure.
 What
is parallel structure?
 Authors
depend on these to
heighten the meaning of their
literature. No, the answer is not
adjectives; think lit. terms.
 What
are symbols?
 The
name of this form of writing
refers to a verse that is written in
unrhymed iambic pentameter.
 What
is blank verse?
 The
plot is a series of related events
that make up a story or drama. The
five parts of the plot are _______.
 What
are exposition, rising action
(conflicts), climax, falling action,
and resolution?
 Comparing
unlike things by using a
connective word such as like, as,
than, or resembles. The following line
is an example of the
aforementioned literary device:
“The holy time is quiet as a Nun.”
 What is a simile?
A
character who sets off the main
character by strong contrasts and
highlights their faults, such as
Henry Clerval and Victor
Frankenstein.
 What
is a character foil?
 The
process by which a writer
reveals the personality of a
character.
 What
is characterization?
 Writers
use this scathing literary
device to ridicule human
weaknesses or vices in order to
point out social problems and
encourage change.
 What
is satire?
 The
stated or implied reason for a
character’s actions.
 What
is motive?
 “I
am malicious because I am
miserable.”
 PS – Be able to explain the
meaning of the quotes from the
story.
 Who
is the monster?
“Of what strange nature is
knowledge. It clings to the mind
when it has once seized on it, like a
lichen to a rock. I wished
sometimes to shake off all thought
and feeling.”
 What is the monster?


“You have burdened your memory with
exploded systems and useless names. Good
God! in what desert land have you lived,
where no one was kind enough to inform
you that these fancies, which you have so
greedily imbibed, are a thousand years old
… you must begin your studies entirely
anew …”
 Who
is M. Krempe?

“A man would make but a very sorry
chemist if he attended to that department
of human knowledge alone. If your wish is
to become really a man of science, and not
merely a petty experimentalist, I should
advice you to apply to every branch of
natural philosophy …,”
 Who
is M. Waldman?
 “Yet
you, my creator, detest and
spurn me, thy creature, to whom
thou art bound by ties only
dissoluble by the annihilation of
one of us”
 Who
is the monster?