Sunday, September 22, 2019

Poetry Performance; Short Stories: An Introduction

All poetry was meant to be sung or performed, let's take a look at some contemporary examples that sort of cross the genres a bit. As you watch/listen to the performance, note in your journal what you noticed about the performance and how the poet grabbed your attention. How, for example, was the performance effective in your opinion?

Derrick Brown: "A Finger, Two Dots, Then Me"
Sarah Kay: "Table Games"
Billy Collins: Two Poems About What Dogs Think (Tedx)

Now it's your turn to perform. Take a look at all the poem drafts you've written this past week. Hopefully, you have a few options. If you only wrote 1 poem, you're stuck with it. Otherwise, pick a poem you wrote that you would like to "perform" for the class.

1. Read and rehearse your poem with a partner. Every student should work with another person/peer.
2. Give suggestions and help each other perform better. Consider the tips we talked about with our speeches. Give each other some feedback:
  • Are you pleasing your audience? Can we hear you? Can we understand you? Are you holding our attention? Are you too unfocused and confusing? Have you put energy into your performance or delivery? Are you boring? Are you making occasional eye-contact with your audience?
  • Are you matching your TONE of voice to the TONE of your poem?
  • Are you sincerely trying? [Avoid just going through the motions--an audience can tell that a performer just doesn't care or would rather be doing anything other than speaking...why should we listen to a person like this?]
  • Are you reaching the goals you set out for yourself? 
When time is called, please deliver your poem to the whole class.

Remember: Good speakers...
  • Make eye contact
  • Speak clearly and loudly
  • Use gestures
  • Have energy
  • Change tone
  • Perform with sincerity
After our performances, we will move into our baseline fiction assignment.

Short stories:

Take a look at our introduction to short stories from Shmoop and How to Read Short Stories. Note any vocabulary that seems important concerning the short story.

Students often ask: "How long should my story be?" instead of realizing that any story needs to have a beginning, middle, and end. This sort of open-ended question really has no answer. How long should a story be? Well, traditionally, short stories are shorter than novels. That's a good place to begin.

Short stories are shorter than novels and are usually not as complex or involved. Short stories were originally meant to be read in one sitting. As our culture has sped ahead, and we don't have much free time, short stories have become as short as a sentence or two and as long as the traditional short stories, fewer than 20,000 words. A short novel is about 50,000 words. Most publishers want novels that are anywhere from 75,000 to 100,000 words or more.

Usually, a short story focuses on only one event or incident. It usually has a single plot, a single setting, a small number of characters, and covers a short period of time. Most writing students start off writing short stories because they are manageable. But the form is tricky and hard to perfect. Many authors spend their whole lives learning the craft of writing short fiction.

Longer short stories usually contain elements of dramatic structure: exposition (the introduction of setting, situation and main characters); complication (the event that introduces the conflict); rising action (development of the conflict), crisis (the decisive moment for the protagonist and her commitment to a course of action); climax (the point of highest tension and the point the protagonist faces her antagonist); resolution (the point when the conflict is resolved); and a sense of enlightenmentepiphany, or moral.

Short stories may or may not follow this pattern. Some do not follow patterns at all. Modern short stories only occasionally have an exposition. An abrupt beginning, with the story starting in the middle of the action (in media res) is more standard or typical.

Usually, all short stories have a turning point and climax, but endings may be sudden or what is called "open"--leaving the story incomplete. As with all art forms, short stories will vary by author.

Let's read a couple short stories this morning. As we read, notice the format and how each author uses dialogue, setting, description, language, sentences, a hook, plot elements, and conclusions. For each short story identify:
  • POV (1st, 2nd, or 3rd person POV)
  • Identify the speaker/protagonist
  • Identify the conflict/antagonist
  • Identify the setting
  • Identify the theme or message of the story. We might also call this the premise. What is the story about?
  • How does the title help make meaning or help focus the reader's attention?
Try to read two short stories today from the site. Record the titles and authors along with your answers on the handout to turn in for credit at the end of class today. [If we're not done with this assignment, I will collect what you have and hand your work back to you next time to finish...]

Writing Time:

In the COMMENT section below, please leave me a comment about your favorite genre of fiction. Explain in a couple sentences why you like to read that genre or that style of fiction. What do you get out of the experience?
HOMEWORK: None. If you are missing any assignments, please complete them and turn them in.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

https://youtu.be/aqu4ezLQEUA

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