Showing posts with label fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fiction. Show all posts

Thursday, January 25, 2018

Literature : Virginia Woolf, the modern feminist novelist : Resources






Virginia Wolf
credits: George Charles Beresford, August 1902

“I see children running in the garden…The sound of the sea at night… almost forty years of life, all built on that, permeated by that: so much I could never explain."


Virginia Wolf, childhood memories

Virginia Woolf, the English author was a pioneer in the use of powerful stream-of-consciousness narratives approach, harnessing a poetic vision that elevated sometimes mundane settings while examining the complex interior lives of her characters. 

unique literary style that established Woolf as one of modern feminism’s most influential voices.


Virginia Woolf's legacy has endured well beyond her tragic death, with the author's importance coming to the fore with the rise of the feminist movement in the 1970s.


Mrs. Dalloway
Virginia Wolf
London: Hogarth Press, 1925

“Books are the mirrors of the soul.” 

Virginia WoolfBetween the Acts

Woolf’s lyrical writing thrived on the introspection of her characters, revealing the complex emotions underlying seemingly mundane events — how the ringing of the Big Ben evokes the passage of time in Mrs. Dalloway (1925) or a family’s visit to the coast hides deep-seated tensions in To the Lighthouse (1927).   
Wolf is revealed for her lyrical writing thrived on the introspection of her characters: Mrs. Dalloway (1925), To The Lighthouse (1927), Orlando A Biography (1928) and A Room of One's Own (1929). 

She is credited with popularising the stream-of-consciousness style of prose, giving the English novel a bold, new voice and pushing it beyond the tried-and-tested narrative structures of the Victorian era into fresh and experimental new territory.



Google doodle Virginia Woolf’s 136th birthday

https://www.google.com/doodles/

To celebrate one of the 20th century's foremost novelists, Google dedicated its Doodle on Thursday to Virginia Woolf on the 136th anniversary of her birth.

Created by London-based illustrator Louise Pomeroy, today’s Doodle celebrates Woolf’s minimalist style: her iconic profile surrounded by the falling autumn leaves (a frequent visual theme in her work). 

In Woolf’s words: “The autumn trees gleam in the yellow moonlight, in the light of harvest moons, the light which mellows the energy of labor, and smooths the stubble, and brings the wave lapping blue to the shore.”




Virginia Wolf
credits: Getty Images
  • Some biographic notes:
Born in London in 1882, Virginia Woolf (Adeline Virginia Stephen) was home schooled in the English classics and Victorian literature for much of her childhood. She began writing professionally in 1900, becoming a significant member of London's literary society and the Bloomsbury Group, a collective of prominent contemporary intellectuals and artists.

She began writing at an early age, having her first piece published in December 1904, and writing for the Times Literary Supplement from the following year.





To the Lighthouse
Virginia Woolf, 1927
While Woolf grew up surrounded by the London literary scene, it was her childhood memories of visiting the Cornish coast that inspired the settings of the English author's most powerful narratives, including "To the Lighthouse" (1927).

Along with her husband, Leonard Woolf, whom she married in 1912, she became part of the influential group of writers known as the Bloomsbury Group prominent in London during the early 20th century.



Virginia Woolf's suicide letter to her husband

After completing the manuscript of her last novel (posthumously published), Between the Acts, Woolf fell into a depression throughout her life and killed herself in 1941, March 28, at the height of the Blitz, wading into the River Ouse in Sussex with stones lining her pockets to ensure she drowned.




A Room of One’s Own
Virginia Woolf

Novelist, essayist, biographer and critic, Virginia Wolf inspired the play Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf by Edward Ablee (1962), later adapted to a movie by Mike Nichols (1966) great performances by Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton.



Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolf
play by Edward Ablee, 1962

She's also well known for her non-fiction, particularly the book-length essays A Room of One's Own (1929) and Three Guineas (1938). These non-fiction works showcase Woolf’s unflinching feminist perspective by documenting the gendered intellectual stratification and resulting male-dominated power dynamics of the period.



A Room of One’s Own
Virginia Woolf

it was her extended essay A Room of One’s Own (1929) that established her status as one of the most influential voices of feminism. In it, she examined the educational, social and financial disadvantages women have faced throughout history, arguing that: 

" a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction."




The Voyage Out
Virginia Woolf, 1915

Woolf's first novel, The Voyage Out, was published in 1915, and her subsequent writings established her as one of the leading novelists and essayists of her time.
Virginia Woolf also wrote pioneering essays on artistic theory, literary history, women’s writing, and the politics of power. 

She would later be revived as a feminist icon, however, celebrated for her independent example and famous for her dictum : 
"A woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction."


Virginia Woolf portraits
Duncan Grant’s 1911 portrait /Vanessa Bell’s of 1912
  • Education:

Growing up is losing some illusions, in order to acquire others.” 

Virginia Woolf 

My readers know I've a master in Literature and Linguistic. So every time I can, I write about Literature. The love of books inspires me all the time. Great novelists and poets are my passion. I read so many books. 




Virginia Woolf
photograph: Gisele Freund, 1936

Of course, Virginia Woolf is a novelist included into college studies in Literature. And some texts into high school curricula. Wolf was one of my favorite authors in college.

But there are some books and excerpts of her famous novels that we can include into high school curriculum. 

Choosing some books by Virginia Woolf, the British modernist, you can teach students how to understand Narration: description, characters, for example.

I would choose : Mrs. DallowayThe Voyage Out; Kew Gardens (short story); To the Lighthouse (excerpts) containing childhood emotions.

"Woolf is widely regarded as one of Britain's greatest novelists, whose influence on the literary world continues to be felt to this very day."



Virginia Woolf
Time Magazine
April 12, 1937

Resources:

  • Today, thanks to the BBC, we can still hear Virginia Woolf's voice:

Part of a BBC radio broadcast from 1937. Among other things, she discusses the process of writing, the difficulties of finding words for new experiences, and the question of where the meaning of words reside.

British Library : Virginia Wolf

  • Film: Mrs. Dalloway





Mrs Dalloway, film by Marleen Gorris (1997) based on the novel by Virginia Wolf, wonderful performed by Oscar winner actress Vanessa Redgrave



Mrs. Dalloway
Marleen Gorris, 1997

In 1923 London, socialite Clarissa Dalloway's (Vanessa Redgrave) well-planned party is overshadowed by the return of an old suitor she had known thirty-three years earlier.

  • Notebook:



Notebook drafts of Mrs. Dalloway
Virginia Woolf
credits: The British Library



Virginia Wolf: video below





Ted Ed : Why should you read Virginia Woolf ? watch below






  • Bloomsbury University: Teaching Resources containing a great numbers of resources for teachers.

"Fiction is like a spider's web, attached ever so lightly perhaps, but still attached to life at all four corners." 

Virginia Woof, A Room of One's Own

G-Souto

25.01.2018
update: 25.01.2022
Copyright © 2022G-Souto'sBlog, gsouto-digitalteacher.blogspot.com®

Creative Commons License
Literature : Virginia Woolf, the modern feminist novelist : resources bG-Souto is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Schools : Olympic Games London 2012 : resources & ideas





Olimpic Games London 2012




Google doodle Opening Ceremony London 2012

"This is our time... When our time came we did it right... London 2012 will see the very best of us."
Lord Coe




OG London 2012
Young English fans
http://static.guim.co.uk/

Olympic Games 2012 just start and will end during Summer season in Europe and some other continents.

In the United States and other countries, the students come back to school perhaps the final part of the Games. They will be talking about their heroes, the athletes from different sports. 

Teachers are already preparing their lessons and they will include the Olympic Games into school curricula, for sure. They can't lose this wonderful experience! Such a great resource for different curricula.




Olympic Games London 2012
credits: Getty Images
via BBC.co.ok

I'm sure that a lot of students will want to talk about it. English students are the luckiest because some of them are at the Olympic stadium with their parents watching live. 

But there will be a great number all over the world that are watching live on television or on the Internet, day by day, their favourite athletes and sports. And the most curious will know a lot about OG to share in the classroom.


Teachers have been watching the Olympic Games too, and they are wondering how they might include the OG London 2012 into the curriculum. 

As I wrote before, along July and August, I will write about some subjects that could interest teachers for the next school season.





London 2012credits: Mark Makela/ ZUMA Press/ Corbis

  • Ideas & Resources for Teachers:

Here are couple of ideas and resources to evaluate and share in your courses about London 2012.

  • Sciences: The Olympic Flame
How do you create the perfect flame? - An interesting question to start a Science course! 

Well, the Ontario Science Centre explored the technology behind the Olympic torches - past and present shown on the video below:






Wow! That is great! You can't miss this digital resource to explore the technology behind the OG flame! I am sure that your students will love it.

  • Geography | Sports:

Google Earth:

The Google Earth Blog has pushed out July 27 a short list of Google Earth tours based on the Olympic Games in London. The list includes a fly-over 3D imagery for much of London, including the Olympic Park area.

"Google's Olympic Games London 2012" page includes London street view, Teams (students will choose teams by country), Medals, (the distribution of Olympic medals) and Doodles (every day a sport doodle since the open ceremony).




Fencing
Google Doodle London 2012


Doodles:



Rhythmic Gymnastics Google Doodle London 2012
https://www.google.com/doodles/

Google is publishing a Doodle every day since the Opening illustrating some of the 36 sports present at the Olympic Games 2012. The Olympic Games Doodles will be an excellent digital resource to include into school curriculum.

Teachers could use Doodles to start a lesson in Sports and/or Geography curriculum inviting the students to explore the page and find all the stories about the games. It might be a simple but good motivation for cross-curricular projects.




Synchronized swimming
Google Doodle London 2012

Examples: 

Sports: To take it a step further, you might ask students to make a research why a country produces exceptional athletes in a given sport. For example, you might challenge students to find out why United States are strong in swimming or soccer.

Don't forget to teach about values!




Google Maps

Geography: Google Maps of medal distribution will start a simple Geography lesson. Invite students to browse for medal winners by countries, then research those countries. A good intercultural activity.






BBC Olympic Sports Live 2012 will be a fantastic daily reporting to explore. There are 36 Olympic Sports that your students can choose.

During the Games, you have the Official London 2012 website to explore or get inspiration by news or stories to motivate your students in your lessons.

For example the Lithuanian swimmer young teen Ruta Meilutyte said on Tuesday that she was "shocked" (in a good way) to have won women's 100 meters breaststroke gold medal on Monday. 

At just 15 years old, this Olympic star had to do it the hard way, surviving a fierce challenge from American Rebecca Soni, the reigning world champion in the event. Such an inspirational true story!






Diving
Google Doodle London 2012
https://www.google.com/doodles/



  • Going further: 


Sports: Diving (Vocational or Further Education)

Competitive diving is included in the modern Olympics since 1904. Read this incredible article Not making a splash: the anatomy of a perfect Olympic dive by Sian Barris.




JoyTunes app

  • Music: app

Did you know that before sport, there was music. Music as a prelude during the 19 days of the Games London 2012

iPad has a new app! Piano Summer Games from JoyTunes. The app provides directions and feedback for playing the national anthems of forty countries.

Awesome! Propose your students the choice of a national anthem. Then, play on the piano at the Music classroom and ask your students to play on their own iPad. 

Students and teachers can download the Piano Summer Games app hereThey can compete between groups in the classroom using JoyTunes by earning points for playing the anthems correctly. 






They will do wonderful progress in Music curriculum. JoyTunes could be a good piano tutor for students who have iPad.  

  • English Fiction:
As the opening ceremony got underway, its sense of magical realism started to remind us many of recent fantasy films or English fiction and fairy tales. 

The Lord of the Rings featured strongly in initial history of Britain about how much the "green and pleasant land" reminded people of the Shire.




J.K. Rowling
Opening Ceremony London 2012

There was Harry Potter saga in part driven by the participation of JK Rowling reading a short text in the Opening Ceremony of the London 2012, July 27.




Mary Poppins
 credits: Mike Blake / Reuters
Although the Harry Potter character Voldemort was not officially part of the proceedings, he was linked to Mary Poppins when a flashmob mass of Mary Poppins clones appeared to vanquish one of the odd monsters in the ceremony.
  • Curiosities:
Inventor of the protocol upon which the Web is based, UK scientist Sir Tim Berners-Lee, live-tweeted from the stage. This is real social culture!





Sir Tim Berners-Lee
Students might to learn more about the inventor of the World Wilde Web
  • For fun:
Sometimes, at the end of a lesson, we must give some 2 minutes for relax. In Portugal, we have lessons of 95 minutes. It's important to make a break and let the students have 2 minutes of fun in the middle (45 minutes) learning and playing.











James Bond and the Queen

"Good evening Mr Bond," the Queen said on the clip, before they left together, apparently heading towards the Olympic Stadium in a helicopter.








  • James Bond & and the Queen:

There has been a great speculation if James Bond participad at the opening ceremony, and about what his role would be. At the Overture, we all watched him collecting the Queen and brought her to the ceremony in a spectacular manner. Oh! My! Just awesome!

In a combination of pre-filmed and live footage, James Bond escorted the Queen to her helicopter.
Then, above the stadium, Bond escorted the Queen out of the helicopter with a parachute. This was rapidly packaged into image macros of the jump captioned with mimetice acronym. Social media users were very enthusiastic about this episode. And we as well.




London 2012
credits: Johannes Eisele/AFP/Getty Images

Other resources:

  • BBC page entitled Your Olympic athlete body match is a funny page: adding details for height and weight, students can match with some athlete. No matter what they hang up, they are probably a similar size to an amazing world-beating athlete! 
  • Quiz: London 2012 The Olympic quiz here


Enjoy, preparing your lessons! I am sure that you will have wonderful plans and your students will be happy to learn in a funny way the curriculum.

G-Souto

31.07.2012
Copyright © 2012G-Souto'sBlog, gsouto-digitalteacher.blogspot.com®

Licença Creative Commons
Schools : Olympic Games London 2012 : resources & ideas by G-Souto is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

References:

Credits: video Ontario Science Centre | Youtube
            video Apple | iTunes