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Jenny Gilbert

An Interview with Janet Brennan Croft « Middle-earth - 0 views

  • MM: Do you feel that fantasy is closely married to martial history?  Can we have interesting fantasy stories that are about things other than great wars and the conflicts between man and monster?  Is armed conflict an essential element for such a broad swath of literature? JBC: Armed conflict certainly isn’t a necessary component of fantasy — but it is a human endeavor full of high drama which can reveal the best and worst elements of human nature. Therefore an author will find it a quite efficient way to reveal character, move action forward, and as Lois McMaster Bujold suggests, find the worst things you can do to your characters. Fantasy may also have a particular affinity for war and battle as a means of allegorizing great conflicts of concepts of good and evil, but there is plenty of fantasy that gets along quite well without it – think of the vast majority of the Discworld series, for example, or the early books of the Harry Potter series.
  • JBC: Armed conflict certainly isn’t a necessary component of fantasy — but it is a human endeavor full of high drama which can reveal the best and worst elements of human nature. Therefore an author will find it a quite efficient way to reveal character, move action forward, and as Lois McMaster Bujold suggests, find the worst things you can do to your characters. Fantasy may also have a particular affinity for war and battle as a means of allegorizing great conflicts of concepts of good and evil, but there is plenty of fantasy that gets along quite well without it – think of the vast majority of the Discworld series, for example, or the early books of the Harry Potter series.
  • MM: Do you feel that fantasy is closely married to martial history?  Can we have interesting fantasy stories that are about things other than great wars and the conflicts between man and monster?  Is armed conflict an essential element for such a broad swath of literature?
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    scroll to quote about armed conflict
Jenny Gilbert

VCE English | VCE English exam 2011 review - 1 views

  • TONE: to begin with, Day adopted a somewhat humorous tone which allowed her to establish a sense of intimacy with the readers. Her voice turned to one of longing and nostalgia throughout the blog as she recalled the days when tattoos were a symbol of oppression. Disappointment is hinted at when she realises that today, it is rather a fashion statement and has been commodified. There is also a sense of regret, as she looks at her own tattoo and realises that because of social attitudes, that tattoo on her skin has forced her image into one of fashionary statemennt, when initially it was a symbol of her rebellion as a feminine. This tone full of longing becomes contagious to readers as they too realise that modern society has “dimished’ the image and “power” which tattoos once yielded
  • a) that the image of tattoos has changed over time. This is made undeniably clear by Day and inevitably becomes adopted by the readers as part of their views. This is important.
  • however she implictly argues against getting a tattoo, yet this is not the majority of her argument, the other one is) As the onus is placed on the reader to decide they read the opinions and are swayed either for getting tattoos or against.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • that is, whether youll get one or not, the face and image of tatoos has changed.
  • IT WAS AN OPINION BLOG WRITTEN ON THE INTERNET WEBSITE “STREET BEATS”. This is very important, and was included in the background information. Many students tend to leave this out alot.
  • tattoos have lost their strength in negatively defining a person and have become a trend.
  • An image showing three arms with the same tattoo, yet the bearers face is hidden in the darkness, where the tattoo becomes the only way to indentify the bearer. This tied in great with Day’s idea that tattoos represent more than a fashion statement.
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    Reactions to the 2011 VCE English exam - scroll through the comments - there is a great one on the language analysis. 
Jenny Gilbert

Evernote- A Teachers Perspective by Rebecca Spink on Prezi - 2 views

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    great presentation on using evernote - lots of how to videos and links,. 
Jenny Gilbert

8058_397914976913132_1887584059_n.jpg (960×651) - 0 views

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    great quote 
Jenny Gilbert

Tools & Resources: English Grammar Glossary - CliffsNotes - 0 views

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    another great resource for students
Jenny Gilbert

MindMeister for iPhone now free at MindMeister Blog - 0 views

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    great brainstorming and thinking tool.
Jenny Gilbert

war-casualties-graphic-Full.jpg (JPEG Image, 2000×1333 pixels) - Scaled (51%) - 1 views

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    great graphic of deaths resulting from world conflicts
Jenny Gilbert

Online Course Lady: Writing with Aesop: Conjunctive Adverbs - 0 views

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    Students need to learn when and how to sue these to help their writing flow well. This is a great page to share with them. 
Jenny Gilbert

Timeline - Israel, the Gaza Strip and Hamas - Interactive Feature - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    great resource to cover the gaza conflict for yr 12 encountering conflict students. Includes reports, photos and videos. Can be shown in classroom with datashow.
Jenny Gilbert

Debatewise - where great minds differ - 0 views

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    This is a good Issues resource site, especially for oral topics. However ensure that your issue has a relevant Australian context and can be supported as much as possible by Australian data. Your audience is Australian - our cares are for our own issues.
Jenny Gilbert

Myths sheet - 1 views

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    We hear a great deal about 'illegal boat arrivals', 'detention centres' and 'border protection'. Its almost all spin. There is no threat to Australia's borders, no 'flood of illegals', and no 'influx of boat arrivals'. A trickle, not a flood The numbers in Australia are very small.
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