Click on the below link and open the ppt and study the topic.
Study the following examples of SOP
Click on the below link and open the ppt and study the topic.
Study the following examples of SOP
2.2 The Sower
v
Appreciation of the Poem –
·
About the Poem- This Poem is written by Victor Hugo. This poem is
about the hard work and persistence of a sower, who works tirelessly and relentlessly.
·
About the poet – Originally the poem is written by Victor Hugo in
French. It was translated into English by Torulata Dutt. She is considered to
be ‘The first Indian poetess’ to write verses in English and French. She
translated many poems. Her poems such as ‘Seeta’, ‘Lotus’ are well loved.
·
About the title – The title itself depicts that this poem is about the
hard work of the farmer. It is appropriate to the poem.
·
Theme –
The poem describes a dedicated farmer who is striving hard tirelessly with huge
expectations of having good harvest. The farmer shows true perception in his
assessment of scattering the precious grain in the farm. The poet expresses
respect about the farmer.
·
Poetic devices – The rhyme scheme used in this poem is ‘abab’. There
are many figures of speech are used in the poem such as Personification,
Inversion, Alliteration, Hyperbole, Antithesis, Repetition etc.
·
Language – The language is very easy and simple to understand.
The poet depicts the clear picture of the farmer through his language.
·
Special Features – This is an allegorical poem, in which the sower –
character representing the qualities like dedication, perseverance. In this
poem the poet uses different imagery like silhouette, twilight hastens on to
rule, precious grain etc. to describe the noble work of the farmer.
·
Message – The poem gives us the message that we must look
forward with optimism, one should have a powerful enough mind, positive
attitude, strong determination and spirit.
·
Your Opinion about the poem – It is a realistic poem. I like the poem very much
because it depicts the real hard work of the farmer and teaches us optimism and
positive attitude.
3.3. Note Making
Note - Taking and Note - Making
Both the skills are totally different.
Note - taking is a passive process which is undertaken during lectures.
- Note - taking at glance gives a complete view of a paragraph or any content which contains the main points and supporting details of what is heard (during lectures or speech).
- Taking notes while reading from different books and present for
different purposes.
- Note-making is
a more
active and focused ‘writing
skill’ where
a concrete connection between all relevant
concepts and words is drawn to infuse
or connect all thoughts
together by a method. (points, tree
diagram or a table etc.)
Similarities between
Note-taking and Note-making
- Both provide the
students with material for easy reference, preparation and study during an examination.
- Both aid the students in remembering
facts easier as it utilizes both reading and listening senses.
- Both have the same purpose, that is for the students
to excel in their studies.
- Both help the students
to concentrate better and effectively.
NOTE-TAKING AND
NOTE-MAKING
Note -taking |
Note- making |
- Only jotting down points, involves
no sight interpretation |
- Helps student to see each point
clearly along with its link or connection with each other |
- Very
little changes
are required |
-
Easier
to change the
notes made |
- Taking points
from
one
source at a time |
- Involves the taking of
points
from different
sources. |
-
Less understanding |
-
More understanding |
- Points
or notes are written
in full form. Points given
by
sources are taken directly. |
-
Note making
is often in short form. |
- Only gives the early configuration for the whole topic. |
- Helps
the
students in capturing its
main key. |
- Notes are made from sources. They are hand-made since the time available is
limited. |
- Constructed by the learner themselves, in hand-made or in computer-typed form |
Heading / Title of the topic 1. Sub heading 1 a. i) point 1 a.
Sub sub-heading 1. ii) a. sub point 1 2. ii) b. sub point 2 a. iii) Point 2 2. Sub – heading - 2
2. i) Point 1
2. ii) sub heading
2.ii) a. sub point 1 2. ii) b. sub point 2 2. iii) point 2
Key
|
CERRY TREE
Appreciation of the poem
Click on the below link and you will get the ppt of this poem. there are figures of speech and poetic devices and other things too.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1w18FSNleVKbOjdIBA2FVflwUvVc7Hr56/view?usp=sharing
4.1 History of Novel
Short Notes for objective type of questions
1. The word NOVEL is derived from the Italian word NOVELLA which means NEW.
2. A novel is relatively long narrative fiction which describes intimate human experiences.
3. The novel has a history of about two thousand years.
4. Murasaki Shikubi's "Tale of Genji" (1010) has been considered as the world's first novel.
5. The European novel is often said to begin with 'Don Quixote' by Spanish writer Miguel de Cervantes which was published in two parts between 1605 and 1615.
6. After 1740, novel originated as the literary form in England.
7.Novella - originated from Italian word 'Novelle' .
8. Novella - shorter than novel and longer than short stories.
9. 9. Important Novella are -
a) a) The Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad
b b) The Turn of the Screw by Henry James
c) Billy Budd by Hermann Melville
d) Death in Venice by Thomas Mann
e) Seize The Day by Saul Bellow
f) Pearl by John Steinbeck
Writer |
Novel |
Related information |
Virgil |
Ecologues |
|
Malory |
Morte De Arthur |
|
Geoffrey Chaucer |
The Canterbury Tales |
|
Murasaki Shikibu |
Tale of Genji (1010) |
World's first novel |
Miguel de Cervantes |
Don Quixote (1605&1615) |
European first novel |
John Bunyan |
The Pilgrims Progress |
1678 |
Aphra Behn |
Oroonoku |
1688 |
Daniel Defoe |
Robinson Crusoe, Mall Flanders |
|
Jonathan Swift |
Gulliver’s Travels |
Famous satire |
Samuel Richardson |
Pamela, Virtue Rewarded and Clarissa |
Epistolary novels, 18 th century novelists |
Henry Fielding, Lawrence Sterne, Tobias Smollett |
|
18 th century novelists |
Charles Dickens, Walter Scott, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Horace
Walpole, Thomas hardy, Willkie Collins and H.G. Wells |
|
18 th century novelists |
E.M. Forster,
James Joyce,
Joseph Conrad, Henry James, George
Orwell, Graham Greene, D.H.
Lawrence, William
Golding and Anthony Burgess. |
|
20th century novelists |
Salman Rushdie (India), V.S. Naipaul (Trinidad), Kazuo
Ishigura (Japan) |
|
Immigrant authors of 20th century |
Women Novelists |
||
Frances Burney |
Evelina |
Novel of manners |
Ann Radcliffe |
|
Gothic novels |
Mary Shelley |
Frankenstein |
Science fiction |
Jane
Austen |
|
Ruling over the minds of people |
Bronte
sisters Emily |
The wuthering Heights |
|
Charlotte |
Jane eyre |
|
Mary
Ann Evans alias George Eliot |
|
Wrote psychological novels |
Virginia
Woolf |
|
Pioneer of the Stream of consciousness technique of English
novel |
Agatha
Christie |
Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple |
Wrote novels on crime |
Harper
Lee, , Margaret Atwood, Toni Morrison and Alice Walker |
|
Other women novelists |
Indian Scenario |
||
Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyaya |
Rajmohan’s Wife |
First novel in English written by an Indian |
Mulkraj
Anand, R.K. Narayan and Raja Rao |
|
Major Indian novelists |
Anita Desai, Nayantara Sahgal and Arun
Joshi and Manohar Malgaonkar Amitav Ghosh,
Vikram
Seth and Upamanyu Chatterjee Salman Rushsie, Arvind
Adiga, Arundhati Roy, Kiran Desai and Kiran Nagarkar |
|
Other important Indian novelists |