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Week 26 Lesson 3 Literary Genre (1)

The document outlines the learning objectives and major literary genres of the 21st century, including both conventional genres like poetry, fiction, non-fiction, and drama, as well as contemporary genres such as digital fiction, manga, and flash fiction. It emphasizes the importance of understanding and appreciating the unique features of each genre. Additionally, it includes activities and assignments related to the study of these genres.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views30 pages

Week 26 Lesson 3 Literary Genre (1)

The document outlines the learning objectives and major literary genres of the 21st century, including both conventional genres like poetry, fiction, non-fiction, and drama, as well as contemporary genres such as digital fiction, manga, and flash fiction. It emphasizes the importance of understanding and appreciating the unique features of each genre. Additionally, it includes activities and assignments related to the study of these genres.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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WORD SEARCH

N A V I P O E T R Y

D O O D L E B Z A R

T K N P H F A C B Y

J G O F A G I C L G

C A V F I C T I O N

A R E H G C A J G M

M V L B F D T V I Y

A A F X S A M I X C

R A M A N G A X O C

D B A L L I S G F N
N A V I P O E T R Y

D O O D L E B Z A R

T K N P H F A C B Y

J G O F A G I C L G

C A V F I C T I O N

A R E H G C A J G M

M V L B F D T V I Y

A A F X S A M I X C

R A M A N G A X O C

D B A L L I S G F N
Lesson 3
21 st
Century
Literary
Genres
Learning Objectives:
Enumerate and differentiate the
conventional and emerging literary
genres

Evaluate the given literary piece


based on its genre and content

Exhibit appreciation of the unique


features of each genre
21st Century 21st Century
Literature Reader

It refers to new literacy Navigates and


woks created by interprets digital
contemporary authors, formats and
deals with current messages, possesses
themes and issues and technological literacy
reflect a technological skills
culture
4
Major
Conventional
Literary
Genres
1.
Poetry
An imaginative awareness of experience
expressed through meaning, sound, and
rhythmic language choices so as to evoke
an emotional response.
Lyric – a short poem, uttered by a
single speaker which expresses the
thoughts and emotions of speaker.
Narrative – poetry which tells a story
Dramatic – drama written in poetry for
performance by actors which
characters are speaking in a specific
situation
2. Fiction
• Literature in the form of prose that
describes imaginary events and people
• Created from the imagination, not
presented as fact, though it may be
based on a true story or situation
3. Non-
Fiction
• Based on facts and the author’s
opinion which purpose is to inform and
sometimes to persuade
• For example biography, historical
fiction, diaries, travelogues
4. Drama
A composition in prose or verse
presenting in dialogue or pantomime a
story intended to be acted on stage: a
play
Contempo
rary
Literary
Genres
0
1
-story through text andNovel
Illustrated illustrated
images
-50 % of the narrative is presented
without words
-interpret the images to comprehend
the story
-The Arrival by Shaun Tan
0
2
Digi-Fiction

-triple media literature (book, movie/video,


and internet website)
-to get the full story, a reader must engage in
navigation, reading, and viewing
-Skeleton Creek by Patrick Carman
0
3 -Japanese word for comics
-used in English-speaking world
Manga as a generic term for all comic
books and graphic novels
Shonen- Boy’s Manga (Naruto,
Bleach, One Piece)
Seinen-Girl’s Manga
(Sailormoon)
Kodomo-Children’s Manga
(Doraemon, Hello Kitty)
0 -author incorporates
4 doodle writing,
Doodle drawings and
handwritten graphics in
place of the traditional
Fiction
font
-drawing enhances the
story, often adding
humorous elements
-The Diary of Wimpy
Kid by Jeff Kinney
0
5
-blogs, emails and IM format
Text-Talk Novels
narratives
-stories told almost entirely in
dialogue simulating social
network exchanges

c
c
0
6
Flash
Fiction
-a style of fictional literature of extreme
brevity
-there is no widely accepted definition
of the length and category. It could
range from word to a thousand
0
7 Non-
Creative
Fiction
-also known as literary non-fiction or narrative
non-fiction, uses literary styles and techniques
to create factually accurate narratives

-contrast with other non-fiction, such as


technical writing or journalism, which is also
rooted in accurate fact, but is not primarily
written in service to its craft

-1000 Gifts by Ann Voscamp


0
8
Science Fiction
-a genre of speculative fiction dealing with
imaginative concepts such as futuristic
science and technology, space travel, time
travel, and extra-terrestrial life

-often explores the potential consequences of


scientific and other innovations and has been
called “literature of ideas”

-Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins


0 addresses issues of
modern womanhood,
9 often humorously and
lightheartedly
Chick Lit or
Chick
-typically features a
female protagonist whose
Literature
femininity is heavily
thermalizing in the plot
-The Night Before
Christmas by Scarlet
Bailey
1
0
Blog
-a weblog, website containing short
articles called posts that are
changed regularly
-some blogs are written by one
person containing opinions,
interests, experiences
1
1
Hyper
Poetry
-digital poetry that uses links and hypertext
mark-up
-involved set words, phrases, lines, that are
presented in variable order but sit on the
page much as traditional poetry does
-usually found online, though CD-ROM and
diskette versions exist
1
2
Spoken Word
Poetry
-a broad designation poetry
intended for performance,
hence a performance art that
transcends the written form
-the genre has its roots in oral
traditions and performance
which starts in the 1920s with
jazz poets
Activity 1:
Read the
given text
and identify
its genre.
Gratitude by Andrew E. Hunt

The street lights were a warm welcome from the


oncoming chill of darkness. The park bench’s
curvature felt familiar under his tired old spine. The
wool blanket from the salvation Army was
comfortable around his shoulders and the pair of
shoes he’d found in the dumpster today fit perfectly.
God, he thought, isn’t life grand

—FLASH
FICTION
COMICS
Draw a 4-panel comics
strip/ MANGA
ASSIGNM
ENT
Create your own Spoken
Word Poetry about
“Courage”

Performance: FRIDAY
Thanks!
21st Century
Literature
Second
Semester
SPOKEN WORD POETRY
Criteria:
Relevance to the theme – 25%
Stage presence, presentation and expression – 25%
Clarity of spoken words and diction – 20%
Creativity/ style and originality – 25%
Complimenting attire – 5%

TOTAL: 100%

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