Today we need to review what might be on the final.
MACBETH
REVIEW GUIDE
Things to know:
- Discuss
Macbeth’s tragic flaw
- Discuss
who wins in Macbeth and why? Who is
the hero?
- Define
soliloquy and monologue and point to examples from Macbeth
- Outline
the plot according to the six elements of plot: exposition, inciting
event, rising action, climax, falling action, resolution (give at least
three events for the rising and falling action)
- Identify
the following characters and discuss they roles in the play (Who they are,
What they do, Why the do what they do)
Macbeth Macduff The
Porter
Lady Macbeth Lady Macduff The
Witches
Duncan Lennox The
Doctor
Malcolm Ross The
Bloody Captain
Donalbain Seyton Fleance
Banquo Menteith Siward
- Discuss
and give examples of the following THEMES:
--Blind Ambition
--The Corruption of Power
--Appearance vs. Reality
--Superstition and how it affects
human behavior
--Good vs. Evil
- Discuss
the following symbols/motifs (what people and/or ideas the represent and connect them to
a theme)
--washing of hands --blood
--planting of seeds, things
growing
--the atmosphere of Macbeth’s
castle
--spells or chants and
supernatural beings
--weather --daggers
--spirits, scorpions, snakes and
things in the mind
--birds and flying:
Eagles Crows
Sparrows Geese
Owl Wren
Martlet
Falcon
- Identify
the speaker and the significant of important and famous quotes from the
following characters:
Witches, Apparitions, Banquo,
Duncan, Macduff, Malcolm, Macbeth, Lady Macbeth, The Bloody Captain, Lady
Macduff, Ross
- Know
and review your study questions for each Act (you should have done these
for homework). Some of these
questions will be on the test.
MACBETH Study
Guide
1)
Outline the plot according to the six elements (make
sure you list each) and please give three scenes for the rising action and
falling action.
2)
Define monologue and soliloquy and give an example of
each from Macbeth.
3)
What is Macbeth’s Tragic Flaw?
4)
Explain how the following themes work in Macbeth and
give two examples of each: “Blind
Ambition” and “Superstition and how it affects a person’s behavior”.
5)
Discuss the following motifs/symbols and what they
represent: spells or chants and the planting of seeds.
6)
What do the following represent:
Eagles
Sparrows
Owl
Martlet
Falcon
Crows
Geese
Wren
7)
Identify the following characters (who they are, what
they do, why they do what they do):
Banquo:
Doctor:
Donalbain:
The Witches:
Ross:
The Bloody
Captian:
Lennox:
Fleance:
8)
Who is knocking at the gates in Act II? What does this foreshadow?
9)
List one irony from the play.
10)
How does Lady Macbeth lose power in this play?
11)
Who tells Macbeth that Lady Macbeth is dead?
12)
Why is Lady Macbeth upset with Macbeth after he kills
Duncan?
13)
What three things does the Porter say about drink?
14)
Who invites evil
spirits to the castle? How and why?
15)
Set up with a thesis a short essay that explains who
wins in Macbeth and why? Make sure you
use examples from the text to back up your ideas.
For the following
quotes identify the speaker:
16)
“Your castle is surprised; your wife and babies are
savagely slaughtered.”
17)
“And oftentimes, to win us to our harm, the instruments
of darkness tell us truths, win us with honest trifles, to betray us in deepest
consequence”
18)
“As sparrows, eagles, or the hare the lion. If I say sooth, I must report they were as
cannons overcharged with double cracks, so they doubly redoubled strokes upon
the foe.”
19)
“Look like the innocent flower but be the serpent
under’t”
20)
“Out, out, brief candle! Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player,
that struts and frets his hour upon the stage and then is heard no more. It is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound
and fury, signifying nothing.”
OBJECTIVES: At the end of this unit students will
be able to
THEMES:
Be able to show three examples from the
text to back up each of the following:
Loyalty
Hospitality
Pride/Arrogance
Coming of Age
Forgetting (or the evils of drugs and
women)
MOTIFS:
Be able to explain the following and
why they are used:
Storytelling
Back story of Troy
Agammenon/Clytaimnestra
Other Epic elements:
Starts “in the middle of things”;
Odysseus’ tragic flaw; sports
SYMBOLS:
Be able to explain the following:
Birds (especially eagles); Hades;
Odyssey’s Wound
GODS (know the following and what they
do in the text)::
Athena; Poseidon; Hermes; Zeus; Helios
SEDUCTRESSES: (know the following and
their purpose)
Helen; Calypso; Circe; Sirens
CHARACTERS:
Be able to give a description of the
following and their roles in the story (perhaps what the symbolize or represent
– and connect to a theme)
Agammenon Amphinomos
Achilles Telemachos
Helen Laertes
Menelaus Penelope
Aias (Ajax) Antinoos
Orestes Eurymachos
Nestor Lotus
Eaters
Mentor Ciconians
Nausicaa Polyphemos
Alcinoos Scylla
Arete Charybdis
Emaios Aiolos
Theoclymenos Elpenor
Melanthios Teiresias
Arnaios Eurylochos
Eurycleia Cassandra
Tityo Tantalus
Sisyphius
Argument/persuasion
OBJECTIVES: By the end of this unit students will be able
to
1) Define the following terms: Logos, Ethos,
Pathos, Thesis Statement, Order of Development, Conclusion, Transition,
Audience, Hook, Purpose, Evidence
2) List the six traits of writing and the six
steps in the writing process.
3) Properly outline the constructive for a
debate and rebut opponents points/arguments
4) Participate in Spar and Forum debate
5) Watch a national debate and evaluate and
explain who won by keeping a flow chart of arguments and rebuttals
6) Choose a topic about a controversial issues
and take one side of argument
7) List the Do’s and Don’ts of persuasive
argument
8) Write a clear and precise thesis statement
with an order of development
9) Properly cite sources both in-text and on a
works cited page
10) Find evidence from a variety of different
sources including Print Sources, Internet Sources, Media Sources, and Personal
Sources
11) Use the Internet to properly to conduct
research
12) Create at least 10 Bibliography citations
and 10 research entries
13) Use research notes to cite passages from
sources
14) Use evidence to back up your position
15) Use your order of development as an
organizational tool
16) Use transitions to connect points of
argument
17) Use Standard Edited American English
18) Use Proper College Composition Format
19) Use the six steps of the writing process to
draft and revise a paper
20) Write three drafts of a persuasive essay
using at least three sources of evidence
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