humanizing boo radley

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Humanizing Boo Radley

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Humanizing Boo Radley. Rewriting History. Take 10 minutes in your pod. Share your story Discuss the following: How does hearing the story from a different perspective change it? Do Scout, Jem, and Dill’s games still seem innocent? Why does this story seem significant in the novel?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Humanizing Boo Radley

Humanizing Boo Radley

Page 2: Humanizing Boo Radley

Rewriting History

• Take 10 minutes in your pod.– Share your story– Discuss the following:

• How does hearing the story from a different perspective change it?

• Do Scout, Jem, and Dill’s games still seem innocent?

• Why does this story seem significant in the novel?

Page 3: Humanizing Boo Radley

Gettin’ Literary with it

• In Chapter 5, how does the picture of small town life in Scout and Ms. Maudie’s evenings create tension with the other events that surround these slow evenings?– Why does Harper Lee sandwich stories and

come back to stories like she does? • (think about how often Boo Radley is

mentioned)

• How and why does Harper Lee humanize Boo Radley?

Page 4: Humanizing Boo Radley

Tritina poems• Tritinas are 3-stanza poems that

use 3 words, not rhyme scheme, following this pattern:A.. B.. C...

C.. A.. B...

B.. C.. A...

A,B,C...

Example:

A ten line poem we’ll write, just you and IBut let’s call it Tritina, shall we, love?Connecting lines together...fun with you!

Could we take turns so I could share with you?Although it might be hard, for sometimes IBegin with words you might not like or love.

But we could try, okay, for I would loveCo-ordinating all the lines with youAt last, our own creation, you and I.

It ends, Tritina says, with I love you.

Page 5: Humanizing Boo Radley

Got item• Pick a person, an

item, and a place• Write a tritina about

your three items.• It should explain

what the items symbolize.

• Miss Caroline• Aunt Alexandra• Uncle Jack Finch• Francis• Dill• The cement in the tree• The Snow• The Snowman• The Fire• The Blanket• The Radley House • Finch’s Landing• Miss Maudie’s azaleas• The school house• The yard

Remember:Symbols are objects, characters, figures, and colors used to represent abstract ideas or concepts.

Page 6: Humanizing Boo Radley

Journal Entry #4

• Why does Jem seem so affected by Boo Radley?

• Using examples from Chapter 9, list some ways that Scout has changed since the beginning of the book.