Which of the following should you plan to include when givin…
Questions
Which оf the fоllоwing should you plаn to include when giving аn orаl citation of another person's idea?
ENG 126: Midterm Exаm Pаrt I. Identificаtiоn: Yоu are respоnsible for four identification questions. Choose four quotes. Write a complete paragraph for each one you choose. For quotes, identify the writer, the title of the work, and explain the significance. (20 points) “The very first chords which Mademoiselle Reisz struck upon the piano sent a keen tremor down Mrs. Pontellier’s spinal column.”“Everybody today selling toys all of them damaged with water and smelling of smoke.”“She took off a glove and put her strong fingers down into the forest of new chrysanthemum sprouts that were growing around the old roots.”“Sweat, sweat, sweat! Work and sweat, cry and sweat, pray and sweat!”“It’s exactly like a fried whiting.”“She’s probably be backward enough to put them to everyday use.”“I am the Emperor!”“These Eloi were mere fatted cattle, which the ant-like Morlocks preserved and preyed upon—probably saw to the breeding of.”“Kevin Howard sits in that cubicle over there. He is a serial killer, the one they call the Carpet Cutter, responsible for the mutilations across town.” Part II. Short Answer: You are responsible for five questions. For each one, you are expected to supply a short answer. (Typically, the answer is one word or one sentence.) (10 points)Does the unnamed narrator refer to the wallpaper as “debased Romanesque” or “Mozart’s moonlight madness” in “The Yellow Wall-Paper”?What kind of business does Mr. Summers run in Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery”?What is the name of Calixta’s husband in Kate Chopin’s “The Storm”?Identify the future year when the Time Traveller battles Morlocks.Is a fictional character that displays a one-dimensional personality referred to as flat or round? Part III. Essay response: Choose ONE question. Write a clearly organized and thoughtfully argued essay that uses specific examples from literary works listed on our syllabus this semester. (70 points) Question 1. Symbols generate complex meaning in a literary work. Objects can take on ideas and associations beyond the literal sense normally conveyed by them. How does a predominant symbol help to confer the importance of a key theme or idea? Using our reading list, identify two to three works of fiction that feature unique symbols. What does the symbol represent? Write an essay that analyzes the writer’s use of symbolism to communicate a key idea. How does the symbol aid in establishing a major theme, idea, or message in the story? (Possibilities: Hurston, Mansfield, Steinbeck, Chopin, Cisneros, Vonnegut, Jackson, Gilman, Walker, Orozco…)Question 2. How does Edna Pontellier defy the “Angel of the House” model of womanhood in The Awakening? Write an essay analyzing Edna’s rebellion against nineteenth-century gender roles.Question 3. Dystopian fiction engages in probing political questions by projecting the culmination of social problems of the present onto an alternate social world. To comment on the pressing political realities of their day, authors of dystopian fiction envision apocalyptic social scenarios that warn us against immanent threats to our freedoms in the here and now. Dystopian fiction tends to identify social practices and norms that result in the repression of the citizenry, as seen in themes like totalitarian government, censorship, social conformity, economic exploitation, social discrimination, and technological surveillance. Using Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery,” H.G. Wells’s The Time Machine, and Kurt Vonnegut Jr.’s “Harrison Bergeron,” write an essay that analyzes the novel’s apocalyptic framework used to produce the writer’s social critique.