Look in the Mythic Mirror

Week 4: That's a Classic...Composition

 


Essential Questions ]|[ Standards ]|[ Objectives for this Lesson ]|[ Instructional Plan ]|[ Assessment


 

OVERVIEW

This lesson introduces the concept of composition and structure in writing. Students will be able to understand how composition can influence the effect of a story on its audience. They will also compare composition and structure in literature to composition and structure in music.

OBJECTIVES FOR THIS LESSON

At the end of this week, students will be able to:


INSTRUCTIONAL PLAN

  1. Assess students' understanding of the unit thus far by assigning a journal entry at the beginning of class.

Activities - Students:

  1. Begin the study of composition (form). Establish that we have thus far concentrated on the narrative of the myths and the cultural impact of their content. Assert that there is another aspect of myths – indeed of all the arts – that is also a cultural force: the form in which the myth is presented. (Remind students that they had a glimpse of this aspect when examining myths presented in art prints and in music.)
  2. Use one myth as a way of beginning to explain composition and the relation of composition to both the artists' perspective and the audience's response. As an example, use Orpheus or another myth that is available in several forms: through prose, poetry, artwork, and/or music. Divide the class into their cooperative groups, providing each with a packet. In the packet, include a prose version of Orpheus (e.g., Bulfinch, Edith Hamilton), cut into strips. Their task is to reassemble the entire set of strips into a cohesive, understandable story.

Activities - Students:

  1. After all students have shared their versions of the Orpheus story, read aloud the version of the original version of the myth that was cut into strips. Elicit responses to questions that lead to the following conclusion: order and structure are not necessarily "set in stone." The way a story unfolds depends upon the perspective of the writer. How can this be possible? It is because a story is made up of parts, and many parts make the whole.
  2. The peeling of an orange (or a 3D puzzle, or other object with parts making up the whole) works well to lead to the question, What is composition? Use this type of teacher-directed activity to demonstrate that a total entity (sentence, paragraph, essay, poem, story, painting, piece of music, etc.) emerges from the interrelationship of parts.

This demonstration can, in numerous ways, be used to instruct students in various aspects of the logical and rhetorical qualities of composition.

  1. Focus students on classical patterns in composition, by introducing elements of patterns in music, composition in painting, and structure in poetry. Refer back to the orange [or other] analogy throughout this lesson, when considering the parts that make up the whole in all three genres. Be sure to maintain the focus on composition as a tool the artist has in telling the mythological story -- thus controlling how the story of the myth is sustained and communicated.
  2. Have the students think back to the Greek myth, Orpheus. Explain that opera was inspired by the Greeks. Many operas have been written about Greek myths. Lead students to an exploration of how mythological stories are expressed through the medium of music.
  3. Play Gluck's "Dance of the Blessed Spirit" from Orpheus and Eurydice. Begin with simplistic questions, such as: What does the story of Orpheus tell us about the Ancient Greeks' attitudes towards music? and What part of the story do you think we are listening to? In their journals, have students respond to at least three of the questions provided in this unit while listening to the music.

CORRESPONDING ASSESSMENTS


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