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7th Grade Language Arts October 2, 2014 EQ: 1) How do writers use imagery, flashback, and sensory details to write about an experience or event? EQ: 2) How can we use literary elements to create a masterpiece (writing)? Warm Up for Today How can we use literary elements to create a masterpiece (writing)? In your warm up composition, read and write the conflicts. Decide rather each conflict is external or internal and record your response at the end of the conflict. Be sure to underline your response. 4th Period TID only Internal conflict, which takes place in a person’s mind—for example, a struggle to make a decision or overcome a feeling. Internal conflicts are character vs. self. • External conflict, which generally takes place between a person and someone or something else, such as nature, another person or persons, or an event or situation. External conflicts may be character vs. character, character vs. nature, or character vs. society. In your warm up composition, identify the type of conflict presented in each example below. **Two three-year olds fight over the same toy dump Warm Up for Today Title your paper Types of Conflict truck.__________ **An 80-year-old wants to attend his grandson’s graduation in another state, but is afraid that his health won’t take the stress of the trip.______ **Two teens on a hike get lost in a blizzard.____ ** During World War I, a young man with religious beliefs against fighting is drafted into the army____ Character A character is a person, or sometimes even an animal, who takes part in the action of a short story or other literary work. Setting The 5 Important Literary Elements of a Story The setting of a short story is the time and place in which it happens. Authors often use descriptions of landscape, scenery, buildings, seasons or weather to provide a strong sense of setting. Plot A plot is a series of events and character actions that relate to the central conflict. Conflict The conflict is a struggle between two people or things in a short story. The main character is usually on one side of the central conflict. On the other side, the main character may struggle against another important character, against the forces of nature, against society, or even against something inside himself or herself (feelings, emotions, illness). Theme The theme is the central idea or belief in a short story. The author creates characters to appear in a literary work (writing). A character can be a person, animal, or object. The way that characters in a story interact (behave) with Characters each other is a big part of telling a story. Through the words and actions of the characters, the story comes alive for the readers. Make Your List Focusing on the flashback memory list that you created, think about the characters that are in your flashback. In a list format, jot down all of those characters and other characters that’s apart of your memory. For example: Sabrina - 1st main character Angela –2nd main character Latashia Dorm mother My mother Using Sensory Details and Descriptions in Your Writing Description/sensory details allow the author to tell how characters, look, dress, and how old they are. Authors also use other sensory details throughout their writing to describe how events and/or items smell, sound, taste, and feel. Expand Your List Revisit your flashback list and describe each character using sensory details. For Example: Sabrina – fluffy, jealous, soft, furry, whispering meow, tuna fish, sometimes unpleasant Latashia – petite in height, unset, fair complexion What Drives a Story? Setting, characters, conflict Setting The setting is the time and place of the action. The time might be a historical era, the season, or the time of day. The place might be a country, a neighborhood, a room, etc. In many stories and movies, the setting affects the action and the characters’ feelings. Flashback Revisit your flashback and describe the setting where your flashback took place. Tell me the time, day, date, and location of your flashback. Conflict The conflict (problem) is a struggle between different forces. It is the fuel that keeps the action moving forward. There are 2 types of conflicts. Conflict External conflict – a struggle between a character and an outside force which might be another character, a group of characters, or nature. Internal Conflict – a struggle within a character’s mind. Let’s look at p. 24 in your Literature textbook for some examples. Plot A plot is a series of events and character actions that relate to the central conflict. A typical plot can be broken down into 5 stages. Exposition – Introduces the setting and the characters. It also sets up or hints at the conflict. Rising Action – Builds suspense in the audience. It shows how the conflict unfolds and become more complicated. Climax – The most exciting moment and the turning point. Often results in a change for the main character. Falling Action – Reveals how the main character begins to resolve the conflict. The suspense begins to disappear. Resolution – Ties up loose ends and sometimes offers an unexpected twist before the story ends. Revisit your flash back Describe the conflict in your flash back. Be sure to specific details. Now, that you have had the experience of generating a conflict within your group, working intra personally, read the two short stories on p. 25 in the literature text book. Your Turn to Identify the Conflict After reading p. 25, compose your thoughts to record in your warm up composition the setting of The Clay Marble. After reading Island of the Blue Dolphins, list the conflict in the short story by writing what the exact problem is. Next, tell me if the conflict is internal or external and explain why.