35
Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning

Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

Symbolism and Allegory

Layers of Meaning

Page 2: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

What Symbols Stand For

• A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to

which we have attached extraordinary meaning and

significance.

Page 3: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

Flags

• We use a rectangle of dyed cloth to symbolize a country.

Page 4: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

Common Sights

• We use a picture of a skull and

crossbones to symbolize poison

or danger.

• We send red roses as a symbol of love.

Page 5: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

Where Do Symbols Come From?

• Symbols can be inherited or invented

• The most familiar symbols have been inherited, meaning, they have been handed down over time

Page 6: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

“Inherited”• For example: no one really

knows who first thought of using a lion as a symbol of power, courage and domination

• Once these qualities were associated with the animal, images of lions appeared on flags, banners, coats of arms and castle walls

• The lion became a public symbol that shows up in art and literature, even today!

• Can you think of some examples of how lions are used as a symbol of courage and power?

Page 7: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

• People through out history have endowed ordinary objects with meanings far beyond their simple meaning,

A crown symbolizes royalty

An olive branch

symbolizes peace

Five linked rings

symbolize the Olympics

Page 8: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

“Invented”

Page 9: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

Invented

• Writers often take a new object, character, or event and make it the embodiment of some human concern.

• Some invented symbols in literature have become so widely known that they often have gained the status of public symbols.

Page 10: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

“Invented”

Peter Pan is a symbol for eternal childhood.

Page 11: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

Why Create Symbols? You may ask why writers don’t just come right out and say

what they mean.• Symbols allow writers to suggest layers and layers of

meaning-possibilities that a simple, literal statement could never convey.

• A symbol is like a pebble cast into a pond: It sends out ever widening ripples of meaning

Page 12: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

You Know It!

In the short story Marigolds, a poor woman has no beauty in her world

except the dazzling marigolds she plants around her ramshackle house. The

children in the story, who are as poor as the old woman, hate the flowers and all

that they stand for, In a moment of thoughtless hatred and violence, one girl

destroys all the bright flowers.

Page 13: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

You Know It!

• While the flowers are REAL flowers in the story, we also get the sense that they symbolize something else, something larger than the flowers themselves…

What do you think the marigolds stand for?

Page 14: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

Well…

• Some readers might think they symbolize hope and beauty and that the children are so angry about their poverty that they want to destroy anything that expresses the beauty of another world.

Page 15: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

Marigolds

• Other readers will have different ideas about what the marigolds stand for, but most will agree that the marigolds work on more than just a literal level in the story.

Page 16: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

Symbols• You may not be able to articulate fully

what a certain symbol means, but you will always find that the symbol, if it s powerful and well chosen, will speak forcefully to your emotions and to your imagination.

• You may also find that you will remember and think about the symbol long after you have forgotten other parts.

Page 17: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

Allegory: Split Level Stories

• An allegory is a story in which characters, settings and actions stand for something beyond themselves.

• In some types of allegories, the characters and setting represent abstract ideas of moral qualities.

• In other types, characters and situations stand for historical figures and events.

Page 18: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

• An allegory can be read on one level for its literal or straightforward meaning

• And on a second level for its symbolic, or allegorical, meaning.

• Allegories are often intended to teach a moral lesson or to make a comment about goodness and vice.

Page 19: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

• Some of the most famous allegories feature characters

and places whose names describe what they symbolize.

Page 20: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

• In an old English play called Everyman, the main character is named Everyman (he stands for exactly what his name indicates).

• One day, Everyman is summoned by Death to give an accounting of his life

• Everyman asks his friends Fellowship, Beauty, Strength and Good Deeds to go with him to tell Death that he has led a good life.

Page 21: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

• Only Good Deeds stays with him until the end

• The allegory in Everyman doesn’t get in the way of a very good story

• In fact Everyman written in the 1400s, is still revived in theaters today and it still gets good reviews!

Page 22: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

What Are Some More Allegories?

Here we have a picture of a serpent (snake) and an apple.

What are some things that come to mind when you see this image?

Often times, a serpent or snake is used to symbolize temptation or trouble. This allegory stems from its Biblical reference.

What does the apple stand for?

Page 23: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

Symbolism vs. Allegory

• A symbol is a word, place, character, or object that means something beyond what it is on a literal level.

• An allegory involves using many interconnected symbols or allegorical figures in such as way that in nearly every element of the narrative has a meaning beyond the literal level, i.e., everything in the narrative is a symbol that relates to other symbols within the story.

Page 24: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

Symbols and Allegory in stories we have read

The Most Dangerous Game: Zaroff: Allegory for ________________

The Necklace:Necklace: Symbol for ________________

Page 25: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached
Page 26: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached
Page 27: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached
Page 28: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached
Page 29: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached
Page 30: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached
Page 31: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached
Page 32: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached
Page 33: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

Poem “The Road Not Taken”

• Listen to the poem• In partners, each person reads a stanza• Summarize the poem’s ‘story’• Identify the rhyme scheme• Identify the speaker of the poem• Identify the tone of the poem

Page 34: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

The “Scarlet Ibis”? What could it symbolize in the story?

What does the color red mean????

Page 35: Symbolism and Allegory Layers of Meaning. What Symbols Stand For A symbol is often an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached

Introduction to Symbolism

• Symbolism = an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached extraordinary meaning and significance.