The document provides an overview of the format and content of the AP English Literature and Composition exam. It consists of three essays, one on a prose passage, one on a poem, and one free response. It also includes multiple choice questions testing understanding of five literature passages spanning different time periods and genres. The document offers guidance on how to approach each section, including evaluating dramatic elements, structure, themes, and literary devices in poems, and analyzing genre, narrator, subject, structure, and style in prose passages. It provides sample multiple choice questions targeting these analytical areas.
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The document provides an overview of the format and content of the AP English Literature and Composition exam. It consists of three essays, one on a prose passage, one on a poem, and one free response. It also includes multiple choice questions testing understanding of five literature passages spanning different time periods and genres. The document offers guidance on how to approach each section, including evaluating dramatic elements, structure, themes, and literary devices in poems, and analyzing genre, narrator, subject, structure, and style in prose passages. It provides sample multiple choice questions targeting these analytical areas.
The document provides an overview of the format and content of the AP English Literature and Composition exam. It consists of three essays, one on a prose passage, one on a poem, and one free response. It also includes multiple choice questions testing understanding of five literature passages spanning different time periods and genres. The document offers guidance on how to approach each section, including evaluating dramatic elements, structure, themes, and literary devices in poems, and analyzing genre, narrator, subject, structure, and style in prose passages. It provides sample multiple choice questions targeting these analytical areas.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
The document provides an overview of the format and content of the AP English Literature and Composition exam. It consists of three essays, one on a prose passage, one on a poem, and one free response. It also includes multiple choice questions testing understanding of five literature passages spanning different time periods and genres. The document offers guidance on how to approach each section, including evaluating dramatic elements, structure, themes, and literary devices in poems, and analyzing genre, narrator, subject, structure, and style in prose passages. It provides sample multiple choice questions targeting these analytical areas.
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y 3 Essays (40 minutes on each essay)
y ategories rose y n rare occasions a complete short story. oetry y omparison of Two oems. ¦ree Response y Ôtudents chose a work. y ëse Ôentence atterns y ëse Transitions y Essay Responses y efore writing look for͙ entral Themes 0eanings Ôocial/Historical Values Relevant to the literary work y £n writing use your knowledge to constructively criticize͙ Ôtructure Ôtyle £magery Ôymbolism Tone ¦igurative Language y 0ultiple hoice (60 0inutes) y ased on five selections of English Literature written from 16th entury to the present. Two of the selections are shorter with fewer questions. y Represent three of four different periods, and typically include the work of a a
Ôhort oem by a metaphysical poet of the early seventeenth century such as George Hebert. y George writes religious based poems. They are characterized by directness of expression and some conceits, exaggerated metaphors, which can appear quaint. 0any of the poems have intricate rhyme schemes, and variations of lines within stanzas described as 'a cascade of form floats through the temple'. rose assage from an eighteenth-century writer like Henry ¦ielding. y He was known for his rich earthy humor and satirical prowess. Authoritative person. He often writes about with fraud, sham, and masks. A prose selection from a nineteenth-century Victorian novelist like harlotte ronte or Nathanial Hawthorne. y harlotte ronte à Her book had sparked a movement in regards to feminism in literature. The main character, Jane Eyre, in her novel · , was a parallel to herself, a woman who was strong. Ôtrong woman. y Nathanial Hawthorne à Lived in a transcendentalist community for a little while. He created works of uritan inspiration ie. Ôcarlet Letter. His themes often center on the inherent evil and sin of humanity, and his works often have moral messages and deep psychological complexity. A poem by a modern American poet like Gwendolyn rooks. y Ôhe is a black woman. Her father was a runaway slave who fought in the ivil War. Although her poems range in style from traditional ballads and sonnets to using blues rhythms in free verse, her characters are often drawn from the poor inner city. y Evaluation the poems they give you: 1. What is the dramatic situation? a. Who is the speaker? £s the speaker male or female? Where is he or she? When does the poem take place? What are the circumstances? asically this is what the setting is. 2. What is the structure of the poem? a. What are the parts of the poem and how are they related to each other? What gives the poem its coherence (unity)? What are the structural divisions of the poem? i. unctuation helps with this. Really think about the logic of the poem. Does the poem ask questions and answer them, or develop and argument? 3. What is the theme of the poem? a. This is the main point that the poem is trying to convey. When a poem is complex a multiple choice writer won͛t make a question asking for a single theme or meaning. 4. Are the grammar and meaning clear? a. e mindful of the way words are placed. Ôometimes a direct object comes before the subject and the verb. 5. What are important images and figures of speech? a. What are the important literal sensory objects, the images, such as a field of poppies or a stench of corruption? What are the similes and metaphors of the poem? Are there patterns amongst these images? 6. What are the most important single words used in the poem? a. Diction. ësually nouns and verbs, adjectives and adverbs are the keys to the poem. 7. What is the tone of the poem? a. Tone sometimes means the mood or atmosphere of a work or it can mean a manner of speaking, a tone of voice. When an author͛s attitude is different than that of the speaker, as it is in ironic works, the tone of voice of the speaker may be very different from the satiric tone of the work. This means the author disapproves of the speaker. Not really a common multiple choice answer because it is very complex. 8. What literary devices does the poem employ? a. The list of rhetorical devises that a writer may use is enormous. 0etaphor, simile, and personification. 9. What is the prosody of the poem? a. Rhyme, meter, and sound effects of poetry. robably only 1-2 multiple choice questions about this. y 0ultiple hoice oetry Questions: à Questions on dramatic situation: Who is speaking? Where is she? To whom is the poem addressed? Who is the speaker in lines 5-8? Where does the poem take place? At what time of the year does the poem take place? à Questions on structure: How are stanzas 1 and 2 related to stanza 3? What word in line 20 refers back to an idea used in lines 5, 10, and 15? Which of the following divisions of the poem best represents its structure? à Questions on theme: Which of the following best sums up the meaning of stanza 2? With which of the following is the poem centrally concerned? The poet rejects the notion of an indifferent universe because͙ à Questions on grammar and meaning of words: Which of the following best defines the word ͞glass͟ as it is used in line 29? To which of the following does the word ͞which͟ in line 7 refer? The verb ͞had done͟ may best be paraphrased as͙ à Questions on diction: Which of the following words is used to suggest the poet͛s dislike of winter? The poet͛s use of the word ͞air͟ in line 8 is to indicate͙ The poet͛s delight in the garden is suggested by all of the following words EXET͙ à Questions on tone, literary devices, and metrics: The tone of the poem (or stanza) can best be described as͙ The meter of the last line in each stanza is͙ y Analyzing rose: 1. Genre a. ¦rom what kind of a work is the selection taken? £s it fiction or nonfiction? 0ost genres will probably be fiction, in this case, focus on characters. £f it is non-fiction, it will focus on an issue, idea, or on the narrator. 2. Narrator a. Always be aware of who is speaking and what his or her attitudes are toward the characters or the subject of the passage. Who, where, when, why, and to whom. 3. Ôubject a. ¦igure out what the purpose of the passage is. £s it to present an argument or to introduce a character? To persuade, to entertain, to stir to action? 4. Ôtructure a. Range from a single long paragraph, to ten short paragraphs. x
5. Ôtyle a. Ôtyle is determined by diction, imagery, figurative language, and syntax. Also rhetoric (language or expression, use of words to persuade or influence a reader) of the passage. y 0ultiple hoice for rose: à Questions on situation and content: The main subject of the passage is͙ The primary distinction made in the first paragraph is between͙ à Questions on meaning of words or phrases: As it is used in line 2, the word x can be best understood to mean͙ The phrase xyz is best understood to mean͙ à Questions on grammar: £n line 12, the antecedent of ͞it͟ is͙ à Questions on diction: The speaker͛s choice of verbs in the paragraph is to stress the͙ à Questions on figurative language: The comparison in lines 1 to 3 compares͙ The analogy of the second paragraph compares͙ à Questions on structure: The transitions from the first to the second and the second to the third paragraph are dependent upon͙ à Questions on literary techniques: £n the third paragraph, the description of the cat on roller skates is an example of͙ All of the following phrases are paradoxes EXET͙ à Questions on rhetoric: The rhetorical phrase of lines 1-6 is to͙ The argument of the passage can best be described as progressing from͙ à Questions on tone: The tone of the passage may be described as͙ £n discussing x in the second paragraph, the speaker adopts a tone of͙ y EÔÔAY WR£T£NG: à pening thesis à ody paragraphs à apping statement (no need for a full conclusion paragraph) à Remember themes like: Appearance vs. Reality Disruption of Natural rder à How to go about answering the questions: Determine EXATLY what the essay is asking. * xxcxx à Talk about: Ôyntax-Word rder 0ood-¦eeling created in the reader. Tone-Attitude a *
y £mportant things to help enhance essay writing: y Types of hilosophy: Aesthetics y Deals with beauty, art, enjoyment, sensory-emotional values, perception, and matters of taste and sentiment. Ethics y What is ethical? Also known as "moral philosophy", is concerned primarily with the question of the best way to live, and secondarily, concerning the question of whether this question can be answered. 0etaphysics y What is the definition of life? £s the study of the nature of reality, including the relationship between mind and body, substance and accident, events and causation. olitical y What actions are permissible? What is good? And how should people live? The difference between right and wrong. £t is often linked with Ethics. Epistemology y £s concerned with the nature and scope of knowledge, and whether knowledge is possible. y Tips/Reminders: y Write with good grammar. y ëse semi-colons. y 0ark up whatever they give you to read. y No title needed on essay, so don͛t spend time making one. y Ômall quotes are good, but do not restate lines. y Talk about diction, individual words.