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ms.hughesteachesenglish

I'm an English teacher living in Burlington, Vermont.

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"She had an Inside and an outside now": Pre-reading strategies for Zora Neale Hurston's "Their Eyes Were Watching God"

This lesson serves as a pre-reading/activating activity for Zora Neale Hurston's novel "Their Eyes Were Watching God." Ideally, it should be delivered before students have gained exposure to the text ( and before they have read a summary). In this activity, students will use VTS protocols on "Portrait of Mnonja" by Mickalene Thomas and "SOB, SOB" by Kerry James Marshall to explore themes related to the text and to anticipate Hurston’s complex characterization of Janie Crawford, the protagonist of the novel. Students will have a chance to engage with literature and anticipate Huston's style in the second half of the activity by engaging in a "Think-Pair-Share" with an out of context quotation from the novel. The student pairs will combine their literary analysis with their visual analysis to determine which quotations should be collaged with each painting, and they will have the opportunity to share out and justify their opinions. Learning Targets: 1)Students can use visual art to practice their ability to close-read and unpack 2)Students can synthesize multi-media resources to develop opinions 3)Students can use visual art to anticipate themes and characterization in "Their Eyes Were Watching God" #SAAMteach
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TEWWG 2

In Progress
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Their Eyes Were Watching God: Content,Form, and Identity

<p>Hughes, Spring 2019</p>
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Motifs in August Wilson's Gem of the Ocean (DRAFT/WIP)

<p>My unit focuses on an exploration of motifs in August Wilson’s play Gem of the Ocean. Chronologically first in Wilson’s “Century Cycle”-- a series of ten plays each meant to represent a decade of African-American life in the 20th century, Gem of the Ocean is set in 1904 Pittsburgh. However, the play examines also history, legacy, and ancestral/family trauma through a metaphysical journey back to the Maafa or Middle Passage.</p> <p>Wilson develops his meaning through a variety of dramatic motifs-- especially fire, water, the stars, quilts, and walking sticks. While my students will track these motifs throughout the play in order to develop arguments about how each contributes to  and complicates the meaning of the work as a whole, this Learning Lab collection will collect images related to these motifs to engage students in a “close-reading” of visual text to provoke initial understanding of their power as symbols.</p> <p><br>NOTE: I have also included some additional images that I would add as resources and points of discussion for my daily GoogleSide decks on the play. Some are meant to illustrate historical background relevant to specific references in the play (ex: images of Cinque and the Amistad, tintype portraits to help visualize main characters), while others act as provocations to begin discussion (the Sankofa symbols).</p>
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