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Page 1: LITERATURE - Wikispaces · What is Literature? We are sure you have heard ... rhyme and the rhythm expressed in ... All this has to do with the use of figurative language that we

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LITERATURE UNIT 1

Material developed by Teachers and Members belonging to the project

Marina Martínez Aguilera & Manuel Alberto Domínguez Vega

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Page 2: LITERATURE - Wikispaces · What is Literature? We are sure you have heard ... rhyme and the rhythm expressed in ... All this has to do with the use of figurative language that we

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1.- Literature as an expression of humankind.

What is Literature? We are sure you have heard this word many

times but, what is the definition for the word “Literature”? According

to Webster`s New Elementary

Dictionary, Literature is “the

production of written works having

excellence of form or expression and

dealing with ideas of permanent or

universal interest”. (pg. 294).

Ideas of permanent or universal interest are, no doubt, those

cultural values that contribute to the way we are and behave, the

rituals that we have learnt from our ancestors and that we are willing

to pass on to future generations. In the next section, you have the

opportunity to see how we can do all that by reading or writing

literary texts.

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Activity: What are ideas of permanent or universal

interest, in your opinion? What literary works do you know?

Discuss your ideas with your partner in the Activity 1.1 Forum.

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1.1.- Cultural values.

What about the cultural values? Are there any examples of

literary works that represent the cultural values of your community?

Cultural values can be simple

things in our ordinary lives,

such as the way we eat, the

way we dress, or our lifestyle

in general. Read the following

text by Juana Vázquez Gómez:

“For my grandmother, the kitchen was a sacred place. There she spent most of her time, cooking or teaching the cook how to

prepare old and difficult Mexican dishes.

Thanks to her willingness to share those secret recipes, my

mother and I can keep up the traditions of delicious, refined, and

elaborate Mexican cuisine.”

“the Making of a Modern Mexican Cook” The Angeles Times

Sometimes, we can even find food references in book titles

such as the following:

The particular sadness of lemon cake is a tale by Aimee Bender

(The United States)

Black Coffee is a play by Agatha Christie (Great Britain) The House on Mango Street is a novel by Sandra Cisneros (The

United States)

Driving Over lemons: An Optimist in Andalucía is a novel by

Chris Steward (Great Britain)

The Flounder is a novel by Günter Grass (Germany)

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Under Milk wood is a radio drama by Dylan Thomas (Great

Britain)

Like water for Chocolate is a novel by Laura Esquivel (Mexico)

As you can see, it is very easy to identify basic elements of our

daily lives in literary samples. Through Literature, just by observation

and a certain degree of analysis, we can learn more about our own

culture and about other cultures. In conclusion, Literature is a

fundamental way of expression for human beings.

discuss them in the Activity 1.3 Forum.

Activity: Now, you can identify other possible cultural

aspects present in World Literature by looking at this word-

puzzle and finding 6 words that refer to a person´s cultural

heritage.

Discuss them in the Activity 1.2 Forum.

Page 5: LITERATURE - Wikispaces · What is Literature? We are sure you have heard ... rhyme and the rhythm expressed in ... All this has to do with the use of figurative language that we

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Literature is also a way to express emotions of different kinds,

ranging from happiness to sorrow. In the next section, you will have

the chance to discover some of them.

1.2.- Expression of emotions

As humans, we express our emotions in many ways and

Literature has been one of these ways for centuries. Sometimes, we

need to express sadness or

despair, but sometimes we feel

happiness and fulfillment.

The elements present in

poetry contribute to the

expression of personal

emotions, thanks to the poet´s emphasis on the images evoked, the

rhyme and the rhythm expressed in just a few lines, which we call

verses. The best way to enjoy a poem is to read it slowly and to read

aloud, being also aware of the sounds and the images in it. There is

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To Know More:

For more information: http://www.goodreads.com/list/show/5668.Food_In_Book_Titles

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no need to rush or to get all the ideas the first time you read it, just

relax and read it a few times.

Sombre and rich, the skies;

Great glooms, and starry plains.

Gently the night wind sighs;

Else a vast silence reigns.

The splendid silence clings

Around me: and around

The saddest of all kings

Crowned, and again discrowned.

Comely and calm, he rides

Hard by his own Whitehall:

Only the night wind glides:

No crowds, nor rebels, brawl.

Gone, too, his Court: and yet,

The stars his courtiers are:

Stars in their stations set;

And every wandering star.

Alone he rides, alone,

The fair and fatal king:

Dark night is all his own,

That strange and solemn thing.

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Which are more full of fate:

The stars; or those sad eyes?

Which are more still and great:

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Activity: Now, identify in the following stanza (group of

verses) the emotions expressed in this poem written by Lionel

Johnson and discuss them in the Activity 1.3 Forum.

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Those brows; or the dark skies?

Although his whole heart yearn

In passionate tragedy:

Never was face so stern

With sweet austerity.

Vanquished in life, his death

By beauty made amends:

The passing of his breath

Won his defeated ends.

Brief life, and hapless? *Nay:

Through death, life grew sublime. Speak after sentence? *Yea:

And to the end of time.

*Nay means “No”

*Yea means “Yes”

Armoured he rides, his head

Bare to the stars of doom:

He triumphs now, the dead,

Beholding London‘s gloom.

Our wearier spirit faints,

Vexed in the world‘s employ:

His soul was of the saints;

And art to him was joy.

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King, tried in fires of woe!

Men hunger for thy grace:

And through the night I go,

Loving thy mournful face.

Yet, when the city sleeps;

When all the cries are still:

The stars and heavenly deeps

Work out a perfect will.

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Sometimes, words have a hidden meaning or a special impact

in certain contexts. All this has to do with the use of figurative

language that we will explain in the next section.

To Should Know:

Lionel Johnson (15 March 1867 4 October 1902) was an English

poet, essayist and critic.

Activity: Now, find 7 words from the poem which can

express or describe emotions in the following word puzzle

Discuss them in the Activity 1.4 Forum.

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1.3.- Figurative language.

Figurative language is the use of language to create a special

effect and embellish the normal meaning of words. The strategies to

obtain this effect are the “figures o

speech”. Look at the following list:

Alliteration: The repetition of

certain sounds.

Example: She sells seashells by the

seashore

Simile: The writer compares two

things that are not similar by means of the words like or as.

Example: As black as coal.

Metaphor: The writer compares two things that are not similar

without the words like or as.

Example: The warm breeze was a blanket around us.

Personification: The writer gives an object, or an animal,

human characteristics.

Example: The dog thought he was in danger.

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Hyperbole: It is an obvious exaggeration.

Example: he was so hungry, he ate a cow.

Onomatopoeia: The writer uses words that imitate a sound.

Example: The breeze whispered.

Idioms: Phrases that say one thing but mean another

completely different.

Example: they buried the hatchet (meaning they forgave each

other)

Now, read the first stanza from Edgar Alan Poe´s poem “The

Bells” Which is the main figure of speech in it?

Hear the sledges with the bells—

Silver bells!

What a world of merriment their melody foretells!

how they tinkle, tinkle, tinkle,

In the icy air of night!

While the stars that oversprinkle

All the heavens, seem to twinkle

With a crystalline delight;

Keeping time, time, time,

In a sort of Runic rhyme,

To the tintinnabulation that so musically wells

From the bells, bells, bells, bells,

Bells, bells, bells--

From the jingling and the tinkling of the bells.

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Activity: Finally, why don’t you write a new title for this

poem? You can be as creative as you wish by using a figure of

speech. Share your title in the Activity 1.5 Forum.

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References

Bender, A. 2010. The particular sadness of lemon cake. New

York: Anchor Books.

Christie, A. and C. Osborne. 1998. Black Coffee. London:

Harper Collins. Cisneros, S. 2004. The House on Mango Street. London:

Bloomsbury. Esquivel, L. 1993. Like water for Chocolate. London: Black

Swan. Gardner, H. (ed.). 1983. The New Oxford Book of English

Verse. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Grass, G. 1997. The Flounder. London: Vintage Classics. Merriam, C. and G. Merriam. (ed.). 1976. Webster´s New

Elementary Dictionary. Springfield: Merriam-Webster. Poe, E. A. 2015. The Bells. London: Forgotten Books.

Steward, C. 2009. Driving Over lemons: An Optimist in

Andalucía. London: Sort of Books.

Thomas, D.2014. Under Milk wood. London: W&N. Vázquez Gómez, J. 1995. “the Making of a Modern

Mexican Cook” Los Angeles Times. Available on the Internet:

http://articles.latimes.com/1995-09-21/food/fo-48266_1_modern-

mexican-cook (seen on February 2nd, 2016).

To Should Know:

Edgar Allan Poe (19 January 1809 7 October 1849) was an

American poet, editor and critic.

Page 12: LITERATURE - Wikispaces · What is Literature? We are sure you have heard ... rhyme and the rhythm expressed in ... All this has to do with the use of figurative language that we

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Pictures

01->https://pixabay.com/es/narrativa-la-historia-sue%C3%B1o-decir-794978/

02-> https://pixabay.com/es/mujer-la-lectura-libro-leer-hamaca-945427/

03-> https://pixabay.com/es/m%C3%A1scaras-personaje-dualidad-833421/

04-> https://pixabay.com/es/molino-molino-de-viento-viento-208570/

05-> https://pixabay.com/es/tel%C3%A9fono-pantalla-tecnolog%C3%ADa-1052023/

06-> http://www.wartgames.com/themes/clipart.html

07-> https://pixabay.com/es/campanas-bell-suena-la-campana-1028706/


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