Thursday, May 2
• Discussion – chapters 26-30• Mood and tone-notes and little book• Finish Reading the novel for Test on
Wednesday (literary terms, types of characters, conflict, mood and tone)
Stuff you should know
• Today you learn about tone and mood, and the effect it has on a novel.
• You will learn how setting impacts mood and tone.
What to expect
Mood and Tone
How Is Setting Created?
Practice
Feature Menu
Get a sheet of unlined paper and make a little book
You may use your iPad but you may not use those notes on the test. The little book will be permissible.
Introduction
*Writers hope to stir emotions with their work.
*Emotions can produce the mood or feeling in a piece of writing.
*Mood may shift, but one mood usually prevails.
*Setting affects the mood dramatically.
Introduction (Continued)
• How do mood and tone differ?
• Mood refers to the reader’s response to the text, and tone refers to the feelings of the writer.
Little Book Headings
• Cover = your name– Mood, tone and setting– Page #1 MOOD– Page # 2 TONE– Pages #3 VISUALIZE– Page # 4 SETTING– Pages 5-6 VENN
DIAGRAM– Back – Response
– Sticker awarded for booklets only
– Booklets may be used on test
– Notice color coding as hints for note-taking
WATCH FOR COLOR CODING AND TAKE NOTES
Little books submitted will be awarded a sticker AND may be used on test for book 3
Mood- reader’s response
*The writer may carefully select details such as descriptive words, dialogue, imagery, and setting to create a mood.
Tone-author’s attitude
The language and details the writer chooses to describe the characters, setting, and events help to create the tone.
Visualizing
Three strategies:
1. Look for details that appeal to the senses.2. Form mental pictures.3. Connect personal experiences to the text.
SettingSetting is the time and place of a story.
Setting can include:• the locale of a story
• people’s customs—how they live, dress, eat, and behave Hong Kong
SettingSetting is the time and place of a story.
Setting can include the:• weather
• time of day
• time period (past, present, or future)
How Is Setting Created?Writers carefully select images and details to create a setting that draws us into the story.
• sight • hearing
the steady beat of the drum
the tart apple
three hot-air balloons colored the sky
• taste
How Is Setting Created?• smell
gritty, wet sand between her toes
strong, sweet scent of a rose
• touch
Setting and CharacterSometimes writers place characters in settings that reflect the characters’ personalities.
What do you think these characters are like?
Jot down your thoughts-with reasons
Setting, Mood, and ToneSetting can also create mood, or atmosphere. It can affect the way we feel about the characters.
mysterious
peaceful
menacing
Setting, Mood, and ToneSetting can also express a tone, or attitude toward a subject or object.
Now, with supper finished, we retire to the room in a faraway part of the house where my friend sleeps in a scrap-quilt-covered iron bed painted rose pink, her favorite color. Silently, wallowing in the pleasures of conspiracy, we take the bead purse from its secret place and spill its contents on the scrap quilt.
from “A Christmas Memory” by Truman Capote
• What is the tone of this passage? How do you think the writer feels about these characters?
Think of a story you’ve read this year in which the setting captured your imagination. Fill in a chart like this one to describe the setting and show its role in the story.
Practice in Pairs-
Setting
Title of story:
Where story takes place:
When story takes place:
Details of setting that reveal character:
Details of setting that reveal mood or tone:
East of Eden – Part 3
• Create a Venn Diagram with tone for one circle and mood for the other.
• With a partner, fill in examples from the novel that reveal the tone of the novel.
• Find at least three examples for each circle
• See the next slide for samples
East of Eden – Part 3
• Examples of how Steinbeck creates mood and tone
• Examples may include: use of figurative language makes the novel seem lyrical, setting of Salinas, California, makes the reader think of a simpler time; Sam moves from the farm makes the reader sad because we know his end is near; we wonder what Kate has in mind for Faye
Bringin’ on home the Venn Diagram
• Lastly, find similarities between tone and mood, and record them in the overlapping areas.
• For example, a similarity between tone and mood is that they are both optimistic about Adam’s recovery from the pain of Cathy
Written Response - back page
• Now you will be working on your own and answering the following questions about the novel: