Dante`s - La Jolla High School
Transcription
Dante`s - La Jolla High School
ADVANCED ENGLISH Name:________________________________________ ADVANCED ENGLISH 3-4 3-4 Name:________________________________________ Ms. LeCren, La High Jolla School High School Period:____ Period:____ Date:______________________________ Ms. LeCren, La Jolla Date:______________________________ Dante's Cover Sheet for Dante's Project Directions: Collect/write all of the items listed below. Then staple this sheet to them as a cover sheet. Directions: Collect/write all of the items listed below. Then staple this sheet to them as a cover sheet. Due date for this packet:___________________________________________________________________ Due date for thisAbout packet:___________________________________________________________________ ❐ Notes Dante's Life / Notes About The Divine Comedy This includes the notes you took in class. ❐ Notes on the Structure of Hell in Dante's Inferno This the worksheet the various illustrations of hell, along with any handwritten notes you ❐ includes The Structure of Hell with in Dante's Inferno have youthe were reading, and theofoptional verbal for roadyou, maps. If you wrote notes in the margin of and kept This while includes maps/illustrations hell provided as well as any extra examples you find your book instead of notes on a separate piece of paper, include a photocopy of an example of the type of want to include. marginal notes you made. You may also be asked to show your book to the teacher. ❐ Discussion Questions for Dante's Inferno, Cantos I - III (write your answers on your own paper) ❐ Discussion Dante's Inferno, Cantos I - III These Questions are the twofor questions: 1) What did you notice at the beginning of Canto II? These are the two questions: 1) What did you you believe notice atinthe II? or why not? 2) Do thebeginning existence of Canto hell? Why 2) Do you believe in hell? ❐ Discussion Questions for Dante's Inferno, Cantos IV - X ❐ Discussion Questions Dante'sand Inferno, Cantos IVanswers, -X This includes the for worksheet the handwritten and the completed graphic organizer chart. This includes the worksheet and the handwritten answers. ❐ Discussion Questions for Dante's Inferno, Cantos XI - XX ❐ Discussion Questions Dante'sand Inferno, Cantos XIanswers, - XX and the completed graphic organizer chart. This includes the for worksheet the handwritten This includes the worksheet and the handwritten answers. ❐ Discussion Question for One of the Cantos XXI - XXX ❐ Discussion Question One of thequestion Cantosand XXIanswer - XXXthat you wrote for your assigned Canto, and the com This includes thefor handwritten This includes the handwritten pleted graphic organizer question chart. and answer that you wrote for your assigned Canto. ❐ Quiz on Cantos I - XXX This is the halfsheet with your multiple choice answers to the seven questions about The Inferno. Score: Most of these assignments have already been collected, scored, and returned to you. The purpose of this packet is to organize your notes. Thus, you are being scored on your ability to collect all the items under one How the Project Will Be Scored: cover sheet. The last five items have already been scored individually, so they are worth half a point each if they are included in this packet. The notes are worth another two and a half points, based on details and evidence that 3 Points Possible you were thinking while you read The Inferno, ❐ Has all items, neatly organized (3 points) ❐ Is missing one or more items (2 points) ❐ Is unacceptably messy, disorganized, or incomplete (1 point) Total Points Possible: 5 A score of 0 is given for packets that are not turned in. Late packets lose half a point from their score. ADVANCED ENGLISH 3-4 Ms. LeCren, La Jolla High School Name:________________________________________ Period:____ Date:______________________________ Notes About Dante's Life Directions: Use assisted notetaking to record the information about Dante's life presented in class. By Date: By Person: By Significant Events/Places: 1265 Dante Alighieri Florence, Italy 1274 Alighiero and Bella Alighieri La Vita Nuova 1282 Beatrice Portinari study of theology; well-versed in classical literature and philosophy 1283 elected to serve as a prior, the city's highest office c. 1285 Guido Cavalcanti 1290 Brunetto Latini 1300 Gemma Donati 1302 Giovanni, Pietro, Iacopo, Antonia White Guelphs: opposed to intervention by Pope or his representative, Charles of Valois, in Florentine politics 1308-1321 the White Guelphs banished from Florence for life 1321 Pope Boniface VIII wrote La Divina Commedia (the Divine Comedy): Inferno, Purgatorio, Paradiso 1337 Giovanni Boccaccio The Guelphs (Black and White) ADVANCED ENGLISH 3-4 Ms. LeCren, La Jolla High School Name:________________________________________ Period:____ Date:______________________________ Notes About The Divine Comedy Directions: Use assisted notetaking to take notes about Dante's most famous work. Notes on The Divine Comedy The Inferno is the first of three parts of The Divine Comedy (the other two parts are Purgatorio and Paradiso). The entire work was completed (when?)________________________________________. The Divine Comedy is (about what?)___________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________. Dante the author creates Dante the character as the man who has drifted from his path in life. Dante (the character)'s guide on the journey is ____________. A model for this character may have been based on a woman he saw only twice, at age 9 and age 18. Beatrice sends Virgil to guide Dante through the first part of the journey. Look for the following throughout the work: -preoccupation with the number 3 33 cantos in each part 3 line stanzas (called ______________) 3 days on the journey -the journey's setting/time is Good Friday, Holy Saturday, and Easter Sunday (the triduum of the holiest Christian season) in the year __________. The Inferno is set in _____; Purgatorio is set in __________; Paradiso is set in _________. Dante's Inferno (hell) has (how many?)____ circles. Each circle contains a category of sin, the sinners who have died after committing that sin (without regret), and the punishment for that sin experienced by the sinners. Dante uses ____________ to teach a moral lesson. What is allegory? ADVANCED ENGLISH 3-4 Ms. LeCren, La Jolla High School Name:________________________________________ Period:____ Date:______________________________ The Structure of Hell in Dante's Inferno Directions: Diagrams from various sources have been included for you. However, you may want to draw one of your own as you proceed through the book to help you remember the different stages or you may want to search for additional examples from alternate sources. ADVANCED ENGLISH 3-4 Ms. LeCren, La Jolla High School Name:________________________________________ Period:____ Date:______________________________ Discussion Questions for Dante's Inferno, Cantos IV - X Directions: Write the answers to these questions on a separate piece of paper and keep this sheet and your answers together. You may want to make a note of the line number where you found the answer, if applicable. You also need to complete the graphic organizer chart on the back of this sheet. Due:_____________ Canto IV 1. Why is Virgil's face pale after he tells Dante they must go onward down into Hell? 2. Who is the Mighty One mentioned by Virgil who descended into Hell and was the first to bring human souls to salvation? 3. Virgil, and those like him, can get no closer to Heaven than this first circle of Hell (called Limbo.) Do you think that is fair? How far do you think Human Reason can take you in life and beyond? Canto V 4. Virgil and Dante are entering the first level of Hell, dedicated to the sins of incontinence. What is the definition of incontinence? 5. Dante talks to a couple swept up in their punishment in the second circle of Hell. What explanation does she give for the temptation that caused them to commit their sin (adultery) in the first place? Canto VI 6. At the end of the Canto, Virgil and Dante discuss a Second Coming, when each one in Hell will be judged and hear "the edict of Eternity." Dante asks if the final judgement will be the same, more, or less than what it is now (i.e. will the punishments be the same, more severe, or lighter than the ones that the sinners suffer now in Hell). What do you think of Virgil's answer? Canto VII 7. Who are the unexpected type of people that Dante finds among the greedy sinners (hoarders)? Why do you think it surprises him to see such people guilty of such a sin? 8. Prior to reading this, had you ever thought of Dame Fortune (Lady Luck) as someone associated with God to be "officially" in charge of change? How do you view the idea of luck as it touches on your life? 9. What does sullen mean? Why are the sullen people considered sinful? What is their punishment for their sin? Canto VIII 10. Up to this time Virgil has always been able to talk his way through obstacles and gatekeepers (i.e. Charon, Minos, Phlegyas). Since he represents Human Reason, his "voice of reason" appears to persuade the three to let him continue on with Dante. Why do you think Human Reason cannot talk his way past the gates of the City of Dis? Canto IX 11. How do Virgil and Dante get through the gates of the City of Dis? Canto X 12. Why can the heretic see the future but not see the present? Gate; shore of Acheron Lack of commitment Chase swirling banner; stung by insects; worms eat tears, blood, pus “The one who made the denial” Terrain Sin Punishment Poets, heroes, scholars, Cannot see God Nonelack of baptism Enameled green 4 1-Limbo Francesca and Paolo Blown about uncontrollably, like birds caught in a storm at sea Dark wind 5 II Ciacco Pig-like and dog-like, wallow in mud and are gnawed byCerebus Gluttony Mud, rain, slush 6 III Cannot see individual sinners Eternal jousts with boulders Hoarding and spending Dusty plain 7 IV Filippo Argenti Wrath and sullenness Marsh of Styx 7-8 V Adapted from Stephany, Notes. The Divine Comedy, Lesson 4, Handout 6, The Center for Learning. Notes Sinners 3 Vestibule Canto Circle 9 At the city of Dis, Virgil is repulsed by devils. The Furies and Medusa threaten Dante. Because Virgil can’t get in, an angel comes to open the gate. Farinata & Cavalcanti Burning iron tombs Heresy Inside city walls 9-10 Graphic Organizer for Cantos III - XX ADVANCED ENGLISH 3-4 Ms. LeCren, La Jolla High School Name:________________________________________ Period:____ Date:______________________________ Discussion Questions for Dante's Inferno, Cantos XI - XX Directions: Write the answers to these questions on a separate piece of paper and keep this sheet and your answers together. You may want to make a note of the line number where you found the answer, if applicable. You also need to complete the graphic organizer chart on the back of this sheet. Due:_____________ Canto XI 1. Of the two sins of malice, why does God loathe fraud more than violence? 2. If we took the sin of usury and put it in modern terms, what type of people from our society might we find being punished in the third part of Circle 7 of Dante's Hell? Give a few examples and explain why you think they would be there. Canto XII 3. What is a centaur? 4. Who is Chiron? Canto XIII 5. Describe in detail how the suicides are punished. Canto XIV 6. Describe a symbol used in this Canto by Dante (i.e. the burning plain, the giant Old Man of Crete, the wood, the river, or one you find on your own). 7. In what three ways were the naked souls located in relation to the burning sands? (You can quote the exact lines from the text of the poem if you can locate them.) Canto XV 8. Ser Brunetto Latino is one of the sinners on the burning plain doomed to roam without pause. Dante wants him to sit and chat for a while. Why does Ser Brunetto refuse to stop? 9. Write the dictionary definition of sodomy. Canto XVI 10. What do you think of the various sinners who talk to Dante and demand to be remembered in the world above? Why do you think this is a repeated request by the sinners in the Hell that Dante created? 11. What does Dante write about truth and lies just before he describes the monster that is flying up towards them? Why does he mention truth and lies? Canto XVII 12. In this Canto, Dante uses several similes (i.e. (1) Life is like (2) a box of chocolates (3) you never know what you're going to get.) Select two or more of the similes in this Canto and rewrite them in the following format, using the above example as a model: (1) the actual action/thing in The Inferno is like (2) the action/thing taken from the educated Italian reader's experience (3) what the two have in common. Canto XVIII 13. What is the punishment for pimps? 14. Towards the end of the Canto, Dante uses very explicit language toward a sinner. Why do you think he changes his writing style at this point? Canto XIX 15. Write the dictionary definition of simony and avarice. 16. Why do you think Dante is so angry and appalled that even a Pope is guilty of such a sin? Canto XX 17. Why is Tiresias in this bolgia in Circle 8 of Dante's Hell? 18. Name at least two other pieces of world literature in which Tiresias appears as a character. 11 In the shade of the tomb of the heretical Pope Anastasius, Virgil explains the structure of Hell: Incontinence (circles II-IV), Violence (VII), and Malice, broken into Fraud (VIII) and Treason (IX). Limbo (I) and Heresy (VI), as failures of belief, are Christian additions to this essentially AristoteleanCiceronian scheme for classifying offenses. Alexander the Great and many others Stand in river-are shot by Centaurs if they move Violence against neighbors 12 VII Ring 1 River of blood Pier delle Vigne Dead trees, broken by Harpies, bleed Violence against selves 13 VII Ring 2 Fruitless wood Capaneus Blasphemers are on their backs, exposed to fiery flakes Violence against God 14 VII Ring 3 Burning sand 3 noble Florentines Brunetto Latino Sodomites can never stop moving Violence against nature 15-16 Usurers sit on burning sand, staring at money bags Money lenders of Florence and Padua Violence against art 17 Adapted from Stephany, Notes. The Divine Comedy, Lesson 4, Handout 6, The Center for Learning. Notes Sinners Punishment Sin Terrain Canto Circle Jason Venedico Caccianeimico Run in opposite directions whipped by demons Pandering and Seduction 18 VIII Bolgia 1 Thais Alessio Interminel da Lucca Submersion in the dung pit Flattery VIII Bolgia 2 Dung pit Nicholas III Heads down in holes, tongues of fire on their feet Simony 19 VIII Bolgia 3 Fiery holes Several soothsayers and wizards Heads twisted backwards Sorcery 20 VIII Bolgia 4 Graphic Organizer for Cantos XI - XX ADVANCED ENGLISH 3-4 Ms. LeCren, La Jolla High School Name:________________________________________ Period:____ Date:______________________________ Discussion Questions for Dante's Inferno, Cantos XXI - XXX Directions: You need to create a question for the canto you have been assigned. You also need to complete the graphic organizer chart on the back of this sheet. Due:_____________ Assigned Canto #_______ Question: Answer: Submerged, torn by devils if they emerge One of Santa Zita’s elders (a Senator of Lucca) is thrown down into the pitch At the end, the demons are dismissed with a fart from the head demon Punishment Sinners Two demons fight over a sinner, fall into the pitch, and have to be rescued by their fellow demons Two jovial friars named Catalano and Loderingo; high priest Caiaphas Weighed down by monk’s robes, gilded on the outside, led on the inside; one sinner is crucified on the ground and stepped on Hypocrisy A circular path 23 VIII Bolgia 6 25 Vanni Fucci Reptiles tie thieves’ hands behind their backs; thieves bitten by snakes burn, then revive from the ashes Theft Cacus=a centaur wrapped in snakes with a firebreathing dragon on his back, helps punish the thieves Five Noble Thieves of Florence Thieves’ bodies are transformed into reptiles and vice versa Chasm filled with snakes, reptiles, and thieves 24 VIII Bolgia 7 We read this canto in class. Ulysses and Diomede Evil Counsel 26 VIII Bolgia 8 Adapted from Stephany, Notes. The Divine Comedy, Lesson 4, Handout 6, The Center for Learning. Notes Graft Sin the Navarese; Friar Gomita of Gallura Boiling pitch Terrain 22 21 VIII Bolgia 5 Canto Circle Count Guido blames Pope Boniface III for his sins. Count Guido da Mentefeltro 27 There are three levels of sowers of discord: religious discord, political discord, and discord between kinsmen. Sowers of Discord 28 VIII Bolgia 9 Griffolino d’Arezzo and Capocchio Falsifiers (The Alchemists) 29 VIII Bolgia 10 Sinon the Greek is included as a false witness (liar). False Witnesses) Counterfeiters Falsifiers (Evil Impersonators 30 VIII Bolgia 10 Graphic Organizer for Cantos XXI - XXX
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