Term
| Historical Fiction Definition |
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Definition
| trade books or narrative stories that are sed in the past and based on historical fact. |
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Term
| Why HF appropriate to teach history? |
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Definition
| Children have a very limited understanding of time and a story told though a narrtive text provides children with a temportal scaffolding for istorical understanding that is accesible to young chldren. HUmab beings tendio think in terms of narrative stuctures of story grammer anyway wich involves charactered forumulating goals and then soliving problems in order to achieve those goals. |
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| Trade books over Textbooks |
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Definition
History texts too much breadth over depth
the people are missing in text
HF presents multiple perspectives |
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Term
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Definition
| not sugarcoated. accurate. Dialogue may be added to add intered but it must remain accurate. Period must come to life. patterns of life at the time and te spirt of the time must be as it was then. eat?live? History of the time is usuall revealed through the eyes of the protagonist. Avid too much historical detail |
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Term
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Definition
1. Events that happened before the life of the author
2. A contemporary novel that becomes historical fact with the passing of time.
3. Author chronicles his/her own life.
4. Protagonist travels back in time.
5. Novel speculates about alternative historical outcomes. |
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Term
| Modern Fantasy Definition |
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Definition
| Elements that violate the natural laws of nature ( something that can't happen in the world as we know it. EG talking animals, imginary worlds, time travel, fanciful characters. |
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Definition
| must have strong beleiveable chracters and should examine the issues of the human condition, the universal truths found in any well-written book. |
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| laws that are established in "another world" must be kept constant. |
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Term
| Categories of modern fantasy |
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Definition
1. Toys and Objects: Pinocchio, Carlo Collodi
2. Tiny Humans: Borrowers, Mary Norton
3. Peculiar Charac/sit: Mary Poppins, P.L. travers
4. Imaginary Worlds: Alice's Ad. in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll.
5. Magical Powers: The Chocolate Touch, Patrick Catling
6.Supernatural tales: Wait Till Helen Comes, a ghost story by Mary Downing Hahn,
7. Time-Warp: A swiftly Tilting Planet, Madeline L'Engle
8. High Fantasy: The High King, lloyd Alexander |
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Term
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Definition
1. magic
2. Other worlds
3. Good Vs Evil
4. Heroism
5. special character type
6. fantastic objects |
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Term
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Definition
| Differs in fantasy not in subject matter, but in aim which suggests a story MAY come true in the future. Rooted in scientific fact. |
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Definition
| good fantasy tells truth about life. clarifies the human condition and captures the essence of our deepest, emotions, dreams etc. Its use of metaphors speeds understanding, interest, and adds emotional appeal. straightforward informational writing does not create the same emotional impact when dealing with topicslike death: Charlottes Web |
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Definition
| orginated orally has no author |
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Definition
| wilhem and jacob grimm. collected stories as they heard them. exactly as they were told to them |
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| French Man collected stories for Louis XIV |
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Definition
| Charles Perrault, softened tales |
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| British, 3 little pigs, little red hen |
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Definition
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Definition
| Hans Christen Anderson, Rudyard Kiplings-modern fantasy, wrote orginal tales. |
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Term
| held to a different standard |
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Definition
| flat characters, backdrop, magical numbers, plots are simple and direct. universal themes |
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Term
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Definition
Cumulative-old lady
pourquoi- why the mos.
beast tales-3 little pigs
trickster tales-anansi and the spider
numbskull-hans in luck
realistic tales-dick whittingtons cat
fairy tales-cinderella
tall tales-old stormalong
fables-haste makes waste
legends robin hood |
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