Mid-novel Quiz on chptrs 10-16 vocab, content (20 points)
The Scarlet Letter
Paper Options
You may choose one of the following prompts and reply to it with a 2-3 page, 12 point font, single-spaced paper. Follow MLA format.
The following are seed ideas…they are intentionally open-ended. Use them solely as jumping-off-points to develop a controlling idea and paper. No less than 5 direct quotes per paper.
The following are seed ideas…they are intentionally open-ended. Use them solely as jumping-off-points to develop a controlling idea and paper. No less than 5 direct quotes per paper.
1.
Personal Connection Paper: explore a meaningful
intersection between the novel and your life (see Hamlet example below) (Personal
Essay)
2.
Societal Connection Paper: similar to the
Personal Connection Paper, but focused more on the societal/group/national/world
level than the personal level (also see Hamlet
example below) (Personal Essay)
3.
The Scarlet Letter: a feminist novel? (Essay)
4.
Pearl: Why might Hawthorne have created her, how
does he use her? (Essay)
5.
The Scarlet Letter…To Teach or Not To Teach…Argue
for or against keeping it as part of the AP curriculum nationally, carefully considering counterarguments
and other options. (Essay)
6.
Something else…If you have another idea that is
truly authentic and meaningful to you and not a cliché’ topic, you can propose
that to me. Approval by me is required.
Due date: October 4
Points: 150
HW: read ch 17-19 (129-146)
Tomorrow...
Possible Pop Quiz (20 points on chptr 17-19)
Scarlet Letter Paper Prompts Handout w Rubrics and examples
Example Personal Essay
Here is an example of a personal response to Hamlet written by Meghan O'Rourke for
Slate Magazine. The link is provided here: http://www.slate.com/articles/life/grieving/features/2011/the_long_goodbye/hamlets_not_depressed_hes_grieving.html
The Long Goodbye:
Hamlet’s Not Depressed, He’s Grieving
By Maghan O’Rourke
I had a hard time sleeping right after my mother died. The
nights were long and had their share of what C.S. Lewis, in his memoir A Grief
Observed, calls "mad, midnight … entreaties spoken into the empty
air." One of the things I did was read. I read lots of books about death
and loss. But one said more to me about grieving than any other: Hamlet. I'm
not alone in this. A colleague recently told me that after his mother died he
listened over and over to a tape recording he'd made of the Kenneth Branagh
film version.
I had always thought of Hamlet's melancholy as existential.
I saw his sense that "the world is out of joint" as vague and
philosophical. He's a depressive, self-obsessed young man who can't stop
chewing at big metaphysical questions. But reading the play after my mother's
death, I felt differently. Hamlet's moodiness and irascibility suddenly seemed
deeply connected to the fact that his father has just died, and he doesn't know
how to handle it. He is radically dislocated, stumbling through the world,
trying to figure out where the walls are while the rest of the world acts as if
nothing important has changed. I can relate. When Hamlet comes onstage he is
greeted by his uncle with the worst question you can ask a grieving person:
"How is it that the clouds still hang on you?" It reminded me of the
friend who said, 14 days after my mother died, "Hope you're doing
well." No wonder Hamlet is angry and cagey.
Hamlet is the best description of grief I've read because it
dramatizes grief rather than merely describing it. Grief, Shakespeare
understands, is a social experience. It's not just that Hamlet is sad; it's
that everyone around him is unnerved by his grief. And Shakespeare doesn't
flinch from that truth. He captures the way that people act as if sadness is
bizarre when it is all too explainable. Hamlet's mother, Gertrude, tries to get
him to see that his loss is "common." His uncle Claudius chides him
to put aside his "unmanly grief." It's not just guilty people who act
this way. Some are eager to get past the obvious rawness in your eyes or voice;
why should they step into the flat shadows of your "sterile
promontory"? Even if they wanted to, how could they? And this tension
between your private sadness and the busy old world is a huge part of what I
feel as I grieve—and felt most intensely in the first weeks of loss. Even if,
as a friend helpfully pointed out, my mother wasn't murdered.
I am also moved by how much in Hamlet is about slippage—the
difference between being and seeming, the uncertainty about how the inner
translates into the outer. To mourn is to wonder at the strangeness that grief
is not written all over your face in bruised hieroglyphics. And it's also to
feel, quite powerfully, that you're not allowed to descend into the deepest
fathom of your grief—that to do so would be taboo somehow. Hamlet is a play
about a man whose grief is deemed unseemly.
Strangely, Hamlet somehow made me feel it was OK that I,
too, had "lost all my mirth." My colleague put it better:
"Hamlet is the grief-slacker's Bible, a knowing book that understands what
you're going through and doesn't ask for much in return," he wrote to me.
Maybe that's because the entire play is as drenched in grief as it is in blood.
There is Ophelia's grief at Hamlet's angry withdrawal from her. There is
Laertes' grief that …(Mr. Wesley deleted the spoiler part of the sentence).
There is Gertrude and Claudius' grief, which is as fake as the flowers in a
funeral home. Everyone is sad and messed up. If only the court had just let
Hamlet feel bad about his dad, you start to feel, things in Denmark might not
have disintegrated so quickly!
Hamlet also captures one of the aspects of grief I find it
most difficult to speak about—the profound sense of ennui, the moments of
angrily feeling it is not worth continuing to live. After my mother died, I
felt that abruptly, amid the chaos that is daily life, I had arrived at a
terrible, insistent truth about the impermanence of the everyday. Everything
seemed exhausting. Nothing seemed important. C.S. Lewis has a great passage
about the laziness of grief, how it made him not want to shave or answer
letters. At one point during that first month, I did not wash my hair for 10
days. Hamlet's soliloquy captures that numb exhaustion, and now I read it as a
true expression of grief:
O that this too too sullied flesh would melt,
Thaw and resolve itself into a dew,
Or that the Everlasting had not fix'd
His canon 'gainst self-slaughter. O God! God!
How weary, stale, flat, and unprofitable
Seem to me all the uses of this world!
Those adjectives felt apt. And so, even, does the pained
wish—in my case, thankfully fleeting—that one might melt away. Researchers have
found that the bereaved are at a higher risk for suicideality (or suicidal
thinking and behaviors) than the depressed. For many, that risk is quite acute.
For others of us, this passage captures how passive a form those thoughts can
take. Hamlet is less searching for death actively than he is wishing powerfully
for the pain just to go away. And it is, to be honest, strangely comforting to
see my own worst thoughts mirrored back at me—perhaps because I do not feel
likely to go as far into them as Hamlet does.
The way Hamlet speaks conveys his grief as much as what he
says. He talks in run-on sentences to Ophelia. He slips between like things
without distinguishing fully between them—"to die, to sleep" and
"to sleep, perchance to dream." He resorts to puns because puns free
him from the terrible logic of normalcy, which has nothing to do with grief and
cannot fully admit its darkness.
And Hamlet's madness, too, makes new sense. He goes mad
because madness is the only method that makes sense in a world tyrannized by
false logic. If no one can tell whether he is mad, it is because he cannot tell
either. Grief is a bad moon, a sleeper wave. It's like having an inner
combatant, a saboteur who, at the slightest change in the sunlight, or at the
first notes of a jingle for a dog food commercial, will flick the memory
switch, bringing tears to your eyes. No wonder Hamlet said, "… for there
is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so." Grief can also
make you feel, like Hamlet, strangely flat. Nor is it ennobling, as Hamlet
drives home. It makes you at once vulnerable and self-absorbed, needy and
standoffish, knotted up inside, even punitive.
Like Hamlet, I, too, find it difficult to remember that my
own "change in disposition" is connected to a distinct event. Most of
the time, I just feel that I see the world more accurately than I used to.
("There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,/ Than are dreamt of
in your philosophy.") Pessimists, after all, are said to have a more
realistic view of themselves in the world than optimists.
The other piece of writing I have been drawn to is a poem by
George Herbert called "The Flower." It opens:
How Fresh, O Lord, how sweet and clean
Are thy returns! ev'n as the flowers in spring;
To which, besides
their own demean,
The late-past frosts tributes of pleasure bring.
Grief melts away
Like snow in May,
As if there
were no such cold thing.
Who would have
thought my shrivel'd heart
Could have recover'd greennesse? It was gone
Quite under
ground; as flowers depart
To see their mother-root, when they have blown;
Where they together
All
the hard weather,
Dead to the
world, keep house unknown.
Quite underground, I keep house unknown: It does seem the
right image of wintry grief. I look forward to the moment when I can say the
first sentence of the second stanza and feel its wonder as my own.
Meghan O'Rourke is
Slate's culture critic and an advisory editor. She was previously an editor at
The New Yorker. The Long Goodbye, a memoir about her mother's death, is now out
in paperback.
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