Essay Instructions: I need a (4) four-page essay on the World Literature course.
There are four separate questions that need to be answered.
Please answer one question per page.
I’ll include all the literature materials (short stories, plays, poems, etc.).
1) List 2 characteristics of a frame story and explain how one of the stories you read (The Canterbury Tales) demonstrates these characteristics. Your answer should be written in paragraph form and should be checked for spelling and grammar errors. Read pages 115-116, 120-142, 169-170.
2) The selections you’ve read from this lesson contain numerous examples of different types of archetypes. Choose one archetype that is illustrated by two stories you have read (Beowulf & Gilgamesh), and write a brief essay explaining what an archetype is, what archetype you’ve chosen to discuss, and how the archetype is demonstrated in at least two different pieces of literature you’ve read. Read pages 18-19, 21-28, 44-45, 47-53.
3) Choose sonnet 29 (see the sample one that your text analyzes on pages 276-277) that you've read during this Lesson and identify:
• the subject
• the speaker
• the audience
• literary devices used by the poet (metaphors, similes, personification, metonymy, etc.)
• the rhyme scheme
• the type of sonnet
• the images of the poem
• the sound effects (alliteration, assonance, meter)
After you have identified all of these aspects of the sonnet, write a brief essay (2-3 paragraphs) explaining how these parts work together to demonstrate the tone and theme of the poem. Use specific examples to demonstrate both the tone and theme. Explain why you chose the examples you did. Read page 279 (Sonnet 29).
4) There are many famous sayings that originate in the Merchant of Venice. Choose one of the sayings listed below and write a brief essay (2-3 paragraphs) explaining what the quote means in the context of the play and what relevance it has to today's life, or why it is so often repeated even now.
"The quality of mercy is not strained./It droppeth as gentle rain from heaven/upon the place beneath." (Portia, Act IV, Scene 1, Lines 190-193)
"Hath not a Jew eyes? Hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions?" (Shylock, Act III, Scene 1, Lines 58-60)
"Yes, truly, for look you, the sins of the father are to be laid upon the children." (Lancelet, Act III, Scene 5, lines 1-2)
"How far that little candle throws his beams!
So shines a good deed in a naughty world." (Portia, Act V, Scene 1, Lines 118-119)
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