Setting in Beloved and Dracula: A Comparative Analysis

L.O: To
compare the
use of Setting
in Beloved
and Dracula
Dracula is the
unheimlich spirit
who  . . .
Using “unheimlich” in your writing
 
 
 (L3C) In two groups:
Brainstorm the settings
Which settings would be most useful to compare?
Dracula
cc
Beloved
cc
(L3E) Brainstorm the settings
Which settings would be most useful to compare?
Dracula
cc
Beloved
cc
Brainstorm the settings in Beloved or
Dracula
Which settings would be most useful to compare?
Castle
Transylvania
Borgo Pass
Whitby Abbey
Purfleet, London
Piccadilly
Hampstead
Asylum
Graveyard
Ship
Lucy’s House
Sweet Home
The Loft
The Ohio River (crossing to safety)
The boat where Denver is born
124 Bluestone Road
The Clearing
The church where Paul D sleeps
The woodshed
The schoolhouse
The restaurant
Compare the ways in which the writers of your
two chosen texts make use of significant locations in
their texts.
In your answer you must consider the following:
the writers’ methods
links between the texts
the relevance of contextual factors.
(Total for Question 10 = 44 marks)
Indicative content
comparisons of scene setting: Harker’s journey to Count Dracula’s castle
comparison of the ways writers might choose to use a few significant
settings: 124 in Beloved or a range of locations (e.g Wilde and Stoker) and
the reasons for these choices
effects of the locations on the characters: Harker’s reactions to Count
Dracula’s castle;
ways writers use settings to indicate social class, wealth, etc, and their
significance; what these details tell us about society at the time
writers’ choices about the periods in which the chosen texts are set and
how they affect the ways we respond to settings: mid-19th century USA in
Beloved (and the significance of the historical and social context),
comparisons of the ways modern readers might react to the settings in
each
Use of the house/castle/religious buildings
How genre affects settings
Everything must be pinned onto the Supernatural
Setting: Often in a Catholic European country. Includes an oppressive ruin
or castle in a wild country
Story features: a heroine of sensitivity; her impetuous lover; a tyrannical
older man (“with a piercing gaze”) who is intent on imprisonment, rape
and murder
There is a great interest in: religious institutions, sleeplike or trancelike
states, subterranean spaces and live burial; doubles; the damaging effect
of guilt and the discovery of family ties;
Hints of incest
The form: discontinuous and involuted
There are likely to be unnatural echoes or silences
Emphasis placed on the difficulties of communication
Liminal states
Transgression
Unfinished business
Fears about the unknown (death)
 
Words to focus on:
 
Transgression:
 
Unheimlich
 
The outside
 
Liminal spaces
 
Borgo Pass, forbidden
rooms:
The castle, 124, Sweet
Home, Westenra House
The woodshed, the
cemetery
Water, sea, rivers, boats,
Focusing on key passages
the writers’ methods
links between the texts
the relevance of contextual factors.
Dracula: The arrival of the “foreign schooner”
Pp74-77
“Then without warning…” to “into harbour in the
storm”.
Dracula: The Captain’s log Pp79-82
Beloved: Beloved’s monologues pp248-256
Dracula
Newspaper article
Captain’s log
Tension: non-chronological
Storm
Confusion
Death
Boat
Matter of fact
Fragmented
First person
Third person
Liminal
Transgression
Transformation
Significance of Whitby (port,
produces jet)
Beloved
First person
Disjointed, lyrical
Confusion
Storm
Death
Mystery
Ambiguity
Key motifs
A hot thing
Round basket
White pointed teeth
Clouds
Diamond ear rings
The bridge
The little hill
An iron circle
A join
The face
Compare the ways in which the writers of your two chosen texts create a
sense of fear in their works. You must relate your discussion to relevant
contextual factors.
Fear is an essential element of the supernatural genre.
Although Toni Morrison and Bram Stoker tell very different
stories set in different cultures and countries, the fears that
they explore are connected. Ostensibly, the two stories
seem to bear no similarities:  Beloved explores the legacy
of slavery in the US through the ghost of a murdered child,
while Dracula is a more conventional tale of a vampire who
ventures to a new land to replenish his vampire family. The
fears, expressed or repressed by the characters are, to a
greater or lesser degree, shared in both novels; whether it
is the fear of the unknown, of death, of the stranger (or
other), of women or the supernatural itself.
Compare the ways in which the writers of your
two chosen texts make use of significant locations in
their texts.
In your answer you must consider the following:
the writers’ methods
links between the texts
the relevance of contextual factors.
(Total for Question 10 = 44 marks)
Indicative content
comparisons of scene setting: Harker’s journey to Count Dracula’s castle
comparison of the ways writers might choose to use a few significant
settings: 124 in Beloved or a range of locations (e.g Wilde and Stoker) and
the reasons for these choices
effects of the locations on the characters: Harker’s reactions to Count
Dracula’s castle;
ways writers use settings to indicate social class, wealth, etc, and their
significance; what these details tell us about society at the time
writers’ choices about the periods in which the chosen texts are set and
how they affect the ways we respond to settings: mid-19th century USA in
Beloved (and the significance of the historical and social context),
comparisons of the ways modern readers might react to the settings in
each
Use of the house/castle/religious buildings
How genre affects settings
Slide Note
Embed
Share

This analysis delves into the use of setting in the literary works Beloved and Dracula, focusing on significant locations such as castles, Transylvania, and more. It explores how the authors employ settings to convey themes, societal aspects, and impact character interactions. The study compares the methods, effects, and reader responses to these settings, considering the historical, social contexts of the narratives.

  • Setting analysis
  • Beloved
  • Dracula
  • Comparative study
  • Literary analysis

Uploaded on Sep 25, 2024 | 0 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author. Download presentation by click this link. If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. L.O: To compare the use of Setting in Beloved and Dracula Dracula is the unheimlich spirit who . . .

  2. Using unheimlich in your writing

  3. (L3C) In two groups: Brainstorm the settings Beloved cc Dracula cc Which settings would be most useful to compare?

  4. (L3E) Brainstorm the settings Beloved cc Dracula cc Which settings would be most useful to compare?

  5. Brainstorm the settings in Beloved or Dracula Castle Transylvania Borgo Pass Whitby Abbey Purfleet, London Piccadilly Hampstead Asylum Graveyard Ship Lucy s House Sweet Home The Loft The Ohio River (crossing to safety) The boat where Denver is born 124 Bluestone Road The Clearing The church where Paul D sleeps The woodshed The schoolhouse The restaurant Which settings would be most useful to compare?

  6. Compare the ways in which the writers of your two chosen texts make use of significant locations in their texts. In your answer you must consider the following: the writers methods links between the texts the relevance of contextual factors. (Total for Question 10 = 44 marks)

  7. Indicative content comparisons of scene setting: Harker sjourney to Count Dracula s castle comparison of the ways writers might choose to use a few significant settings: 124 in Beloved or a range of locations (e.g Wilde and Stoker) and the reasons for these choices effects of the locations on the characters: Harker s reactions to Count Dracula s castle; ways writers use settings to indicate social class, wealth, etc, and their significance; what these details tell us about society at the time writers choices about the periods in which the chosen texts are set and how they affect the ways we respond to settings: mid-19th century USA in Beloved (and the significance of the historical and social context), comparisons of the ways modern readers might react to the settings in each Use of the house/castle/religious buildings How genre affects settings

  8. Everything must be pinned onto the Supernatural Setting: Often in a Catholic European country. Includes an oppressive ruin or castle in a wild country Story features: a heroine of sensitivity; her impetuous lover; a tyrannical older man ( with a piercing gaze ) who is intent on imprisonment, rape and murder There is a great interest in: religious institutions, sleeplike or trancelike states, subterranean spaces and live burial; doubles; the damaging effect of guilt and the discovery of family ties; Hints of incest The form: discontinuous and involuted There are likely to be unnatural echoes or silences Emphasis placed on the difficulties of communication Liminal states Transgression Unfinished business Fears about the unknown (death)

  9. Words to focus on: Borgo Pass, forbidden rooms: Transgression: Unheimlich The castle, 124, Sweet Home, Westenra House The outside The woodshed, the cemetery Liminal spaces Water, sea, rivers, boats,

  10. Focusing on key passages the writers methods links between the texts the relevance of contextual factors. Dracula: The arrival of the foreign schooner Pp74-77 Then without warning to into harbour in the storm . Dracula: The Captain s log Pp79-82 Beloved: Beloved s monologues pp248-256

  11. Beloved First person Disjointed, lyrical Confusion Storm Death Mystery Ambiguity Key motifs A hot thing Round basket White pointed teeth Clouds Diamond ear rings The bridge The little hill An iron circle A join The face Dracula Newspaper article Captain s log Tension: non-chronological Storm Confusion Death Boat Matter of fact Fragmented First person Third person Liminal Transgression Transformation Significance of Whitby (port, produces jet)

  12. Compare the ways in which the writers of your two chosen texts create a sense of fear in their works. You must relate your discussion to relevant contextual factors. Fear is an essential element of the supernatural genre. Although Toni Morrison and Bram Stoker tell very different stories set in different cultures and countries, the fears that they explore are connected. Ostensibly, the two stories seem to bear no similarities: Beloved explores the legacy of slavery in the US through the ghost of a murdered child, while Dracula is a more conventional tale of a vampire who ventures to a new land to replenish his vampire family. The fears, expressed or repressed by the characters are, to a greater or lesser degree, shared in both novels; whether it is the fear of the unknown, of death, of the stranger (or other), of women or the supernatural itself.

  13. Compare the ways in which the writers of your two chosen texts make use of significant locations in their texts. In your answer you must consider the following: the writers methods links between the texts the relevance of contextual factors. (Total for Question 10 = 44 marks)

  14. Indicative content comparisons of scene setting: Harker sjourney to Count Dracula s castle comparison of the ways writers might choose to use a few significant settings: 124 in Beloved or a range of locations (e.g Wilde and Stoker) and the reasons for these choices effects of the locations on the characters: Harker s reactions to Count Dracula s castle; ways writers use settings to indicate social class, wealth, etc, and their significance; what these details tell us about society at the time writers choices about the periods in which the chosen texts are set and how they affect the ways we respond to settings: mid-19th century USA in Beloved (and the significance of the historical and social context), comparisons of the ways modern readers might react to the settings in each Use of the house/castle/religious buildings How genre affects settings

More Related Content

giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#