Department of English

Faculty of Arts, Chulalongkorn University


 

Reading Response 3 and Presentation Guidelines


Reading Response 3

 

The last reading response (2 pp.; MLA format) is a way for you to present your examination of a literary text on the syllabus this semester and to bring together skills in reading, critical thinking, and writing that we have worked on these past few months. You will be working with four or five other students in close reading and thinking about your chosen text, and will be presenting your findings in a panel with them during the last week of class. See Suggested Response and Presentation Topics below. Submit your reading response 3 in class on Wednesday, November 29, 2017.


Suggested Response and Presentation Topics

You and your panelists are inspectors who have chosen to inspect one work (or more) on the syllabus. In reading and discussing that work with your panel, decide which four or five aspects of it is worth "covering," that is, which elements or features of the work especially characterize or define it? What literary devices or techniques are prominent and yield revealing insights upon close inspection? Each panel member will explore one of these aspects in detail.

Alternatively, you and your panel members may be interested in a particular technique or theme, in which case you will consider four or five works on our syllabus that "cover" the technique or theme in fascinating ways. Each member will focus on a different work and inspect that technique or theme in the work. How, for example, is dialogue used in An Inspector Calls, "Edward" and "Ballad of the Landlord"? What does the distinctive wordplay create in Shakespeare's Sonnet 138?

Share your discoveries with me and with other panels in your final reading response and presentation.

Below are final presentation topics.

Final presentations (about 20 minutes per panel, about 5 minutes per speaker) take place on Monday, November 27 and Wednesday, November 29, 2017. Students form five panels of four members and one panel with five members and decide to work on one of the topics below to present in class. You may study and research any aspect of The Pillowman, Animal Farm and/or any work(s) in the course packet that interests you including those suggested by the topics given below. These are general topics that need to be narrowed and refined into a specific argument. Discuss among your panel members what aspect of the topic each person wants to focus and speak on, share your research and close reading discoveries, critique each other’s work in progress, and together design a presentation that shows what your combined effort in close reading reveals about a text or texts. Meet with your instructor to discuss your ideas in more detail.

1.    Switching or role reversals occur in several works we have read such as in Beauty, “Segregationist,” The Pillowman, An Inspector Calls, “Ozymandias” and Animal Farm.

2.    Examine death in one or more works. You might consider, for example, “My Number,” “The Lottery,” “Edward,” “Neighbors,” The Pillowman and Animal Farm. How is death viewed by the characters or speakers in the work(s)? How is death used by the character(s) or by the author(s)? What can death do or not do?

3.    Compare situations where a character is tested between two or more works. How is the character tested? What challenges, problems or obstacles does the character face? How does he or she perform when tested? How does the way a person handles a trying situation reflects on that person?

4.    Examine sound in one or more works such as those by Austen, Frost, the “Edward” poet, Hughes, Shakespeare and Yeats. In addition to denotation and connotation, how do the authors convey or reinforce meaning through sound?  How does the aural quality of words contribute to the telling of the story?

5.    Study the ballad “Edward.” How is its form, an old and repetitive structure, appropriate for a theme about guilt, crime, and punishment? What is the effect of repetition, sentence structure, and patterns of imagery in constructing and developing the characters’ motivation and state of mind?

6.    Consider the various appearances of humor in one or more works, for example, in Armitage’s “You’re Beautiful,” Twain’s “The £1,000,000 Bank-Note,” Alexie’s “The Search Engine,” Jackson’s “The Lottery,” or in An Inspector Calls. What is the function of a joke? For the character(s)? For the story? What is laughed at or made fun of and by whom?

7.    What role do figures of authority play in An Inspector Calls, The Pillowman, or Animal Farm?

8.    Compare conversations in two or more works. What happens during a verbal exchange, or even a supposed verbal exchange like in “Ballad of the Landlord”? To what extent is there, in fact, exchange, and of what?

9.  How are An Inspector Calls and Animal Farm daring works for their time? How do they use, extend, or break theatrical and novelistic conventions?

10.    Choose a poem and follow it like going on a journey. Where and how does it begin?  Trace the construction and development of ideas through the twists and turns of line, meter, rhyme, imagery, word choice, point of view, and tone. Where does the poem take you? What effect does it create? Where and how does it end?

11.    Discuss the theme of loss and discovery in any of the works we have read. Consider, for example, what is lost in “Ozymandias” and what is found. How does a self-conscious story like “Happy Endings” show what one can lose or what one can find in reading it? What does the speaker of Yeats’ “The Lake Isle of Innisfree” lose and what does he discover? How do the two graphic works convey loss and discovery?

12.    Trace a significant word or pair of words throughout a work. Try, for instance, the word dream in Animal Farm, poet and/or Indian in “The Search Engine” or metal in “Segregationist.”



Section 1 Final Presentation Schedule



Monday, November 27, 2017
Panel 1:  Title
9:30–9:50 a.m.
Presiding:
Speakers:
1.  “Title,” Student Name
2.  “Title,” Student Name
3.  “Title,” Student Name
4.  “Title,” Student Name
Respondent 1: Student Name
Respondent 2: Student Name
Respondent 3: Student Name
Respondent 4: Student Name

 
Panel 2:  Title
9:50–10:10 a.m.
Presiding:
Speakers:
1.  “Title,” Student Name
2.  “Title,” Student Name
3.  “Title,” Student Name
4.  “Title,” Student Name
5.  “Title,” Student Name
Respondent 1: Student Name
Respondent 2: Student Name
Respondent 3: Student Name
Respondent 4: Student Name
Respondent 5: Student Name

 
Panel 3:  Title
10:10–10:30 a.m.
Presiding:
Speakers:
1.  “Title,” Student Name
2.  “Title,” Student Name
3.  “Title,” Student Name
4.  “Title,” Student Name
Respondent 1: Student Name
Respondent 2: Student Name
Respondent 3: Student Name
Respondent 4: Student Name


Panel 4:  Title
8:00–8:25 a.m.
Presiding:
Speakers:
1.  “Title,” Student Name
2.  “Title,” Student Name
3.  “Title,” Student Name
4.  “Title,” Student Name
Respondent 1: Student Name
Respondent 2: Student Name
Respondent 3: Student Name
Respondent 4: Student Name
 

Panel 5: Title
8:30–8:55 a.m.
Presiding:
Speakers:
1.  “Title,” Student Name
2.  “Title,” Student Name
3.  “Title,” Student Name
4.  “Title,” Student Name
Respondent 1: Student Name
Respondent 2: Student Name
Respondent 3: Student Name
Respondent 4: Student Name
 

Panel 6: Title
9:00–9:25 a.m.
Presiding:
Speakers:
1.  “Title,” Student Name
2.  “Title,” Student Name
3.  “Title,” Student Name
4.  “Title,” Student Name
Respondent 1: Student Name
Respondent 2: Student Name
Respondent 3: Student Name
Respondent 4: Student Name
  



Revision

Rewrite to fix problems regarding the idea, support, prose, organization, mechanics, and style to  make your paper more effective. Some things to keep in mind as you proofread and edit your work:

 



Final Presentation


Presentation of your panel's literary inspection is in week 16 of class: Monday, November 27 and Wednesday, November 29, 2017. Each panel of four or five speakers will have fifteen to twenty minutes to present their close study of texts we have read in this course. This will be followed by a five-minute question and answer session. A moderator will be presiding over the presentations and discussion session of each panel, introducing the speakers, mediating the questions and responses, and making sure things stay on schedule.


Practice reading your presentation aloud with visual aid if you have any, and edit for speakability, clarity, and time.

 

Respondents give constructive comments on the panelists' talk, indicating illuminating and effective points made, pointing out problems to fix ex. content, logic, substantiation, organization, clarification, delivery, and giving further commentary and opinions on the issues being discussed. Respondents assigned to a panel are responsible for giving feedback to any and all of the speakers on that panel but are free to comment on papers of different panels as well.

 
You will be graded both for your performance in giving your talk and in responding to your classmates' presentations, how you present your own ideas and how you show that you know how to listen to, think about, and discuss ideas that others propose.

 

A program of the final presentation schedule will be posted on our detailed schedule page once panel and response titles, speakers and moderators are finalized. You are responsible for e-mailing me any revisions to your presentation title by Friday, November 24, 2017.


Please inform me of any special equipment needs, otherwise our in-class computer (which uses Microsoft Office 2007) and LCD projector is provided.



 




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Last updated November 23, 2017