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NCS CAPS ORIENTATION
I JULY 2013
DIOCESAN COLLEGE
Reading and ViewingLanguage structures
and conventions
with particular reference to
Paper Two (Literature)
CAPS Document pages 22 – 28
Pre-reading / Reading / Post-reading
THE LITERATURE PAPERGeneral issues:
1. Contact time with the actual texts: candidates must be more familiar with the texts than with the filmed versions
2. texts must be contextualised
(PRE-READING ACTIVITIES)
The American Dream / the Roaring Twenties for “The Great Gatsby”
the Russian Revolution for “Animal Farm”
South African history, particularly with reference to Protest poetry
The Norton Anthology of Poetry defines a protest poem as
“An attack, sometimes indirect, on institutions or social injustices”.
Steve Biko
Neil Aggett
Nelson Mandela
Students march in Soweto, June 16,
1976
Hector Pieterson being carried by Mbuyisa Makhubo
WEEPINGWritten by Dan Heymann (Copyright
Bright Blue)
I knew a man who lived in fear It was huge, it was angry, it was drawing near Behind his house, a secret place Was the shadow of the demon he could never face He built a wall of steel and flame And men with guns, to keep it tame Then standing back, he made it plain That the nightmare would never ever rise again But the fear and the fire and the guns remain It doesn’t matter now It’s over anyhow He tells the world that it’s sleeping But as the night came round I heard its lonely sound
It wasn’t roaring, it was weeping And then one day the neighbours came They were curious to know about the smoke and flame They stood around outside the wall But of course there was nothing to be heard at all "My friends," he said, "We’ve reached our goal The threat is under firm control As long as peace and order reign I’ll be damned if I can see a reason to explain Why the fear and the fire and the guns remain"
url.htm
Apartheid Legislation in South Africa
Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act, Act No 55 of 1949
Group Areas Act, Act No 41 of 1950
Bantu Education Act, Act No 47 of 1953
Reservation of Separate Amenities Act, Act No 49 of 1953
Separate Representation of Voters Act, Act No 46 of 1951
The Soweto Uprising, June 16, 1976
Language structures and conventions (pages 26 – 27)
1. What is tragedy?
2. What defines a tragic character?
3. The importance of foreshadowing.
4. The key concept of irony.
5. The difference between a drama and a novel.
6. The difference between tone and mood
Language structures and conventions (pages 26 – 27)
In the dramas: 1. the impact of stage directions 2. the power of dramatic irony3. the role of the soliloquy In the novels:4. the importance of characterisation5. the actual sequence of plot i.e.
structure / organisation of text
Account for = Why?•Give reasons for / explain why things are as they areDiscuss•Analyse, using various arguments for and against•Examine in detail, bringing in related facts or arguments
What to do with the question?
Comment onRelevant possibilities include:•explanation of allusions (references) or difficult words•linking with the context or main themesconnotations and impressions•establish the effect / significance / irony / ambiguity / level of language etc
What to do with the question?
What to do with the question?
Explain?•To make clear, by means of examples or descriptionIdentify:•Give the most important characteristics ofIllustrate:•Explain or make clear by concrete examples, comparisons or analogies.
What to do with the question?Read ALL the questions and highlight key words:a) direction words instruct the candidate as
to what to do e.g. discuss, comment on, explain, justify
b) knowledge words relate to the broad area of knowledge required to answer the question
c) restriction words – restrict the candidate to specific details or aspects of the broad subject area e.g. line references; “in this passage”VALID FOR THE 3 / 4 MARK QUESTIONS AND THE ESSAY
QUESTION 7: ANIMAL FARM(The statement is the knowledge)
The characters in the novel, Animal Farm, are so flawed that the idealism of the Seven Commandments cannot be made into a reality.
In a well-constructed essay of 400 – 450 words, critically discuss (Direction) the extent to which you agree (Restriction) with this statement (Knowledge).
In Chapter 9, Nick Carraway (the narrator) says: ‘They were careless people, Tom and Daisy – they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness, or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made.’
Critically discuss the validity of the narrator’s comment in the wider context of the novel.
Post-reading Problems1. Rewriting the contextual passage as the
essay2. “Creative” essays3. Mixing of texts and genres4. Inappropriate language / SMS speak5. Statements made without substantiation
or evidence from text (but from film)6. Story telling (description) versus analysis
(discussion)
Post-reading Problems7. Past tense instead of present tense8. No differentiation between title and
protagonist e.g. Othello9. Misspelling of characters’ names:
Diasy, James Guts, Orthella, Desdimona, Desderoma, Desdimonia, Destimona, Riderago, Mertile, Mertill, Murtil
10. Misspelling in general: hankershiff, hangerchief, hankishift; tradgedy; soliloquay
Just for fun ... or not!!Tom belives that marraige is only vowelsThe sheeps are stoopidDesdamona is a young vinecian hairessDr Eckleberg is the doctor that deliveredTom and Gatsby’s babyOthello becomes one of Iago’s pornsOthello is the left tendant of VenusThere is a higher archy in VenisOrthello was angered by Destimona’s infertilityIjago awcastrated the hole thing
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