 Staple portfolio pieces together- cover sheet on top. Include chart behind P#5  Star, in upper right corner, the piece you would like me to focus on.

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Presentation transcript:

 Staple portfolio pieces together- cover sheet on top. Include chart behind P#5  Star, in upper right corner, the piece you would like me to focus on.  Turn in “American Voices” packet in the box  Reminders: Sign up for IB Conferences and, if ready, IB Presentation for American Voices.

 The representation of an object to mean something beyond the tangible.  Usually personal, regional, or national  Examples: walking in the forest, a graveyard, an owl, a cross, a pink ribbon, snake, etc.

 The psychologist, Carl Jung, used the concept of archetype in his theory of the human psyche. He believed that universal, mythic characters—archetypes—reside within the collective unconscious of people the world over.  Archetypes represent fundamental human motifs of our experience as we evolved; consequentially, they evoke deep emotions.

 River/Water (Rebirth)  Sun (Masculine)  Moon (Feminine) CHARACTERS  The Devil  The Wanderer  The Wise Old Man  Innocent Maiden  Wrathful Mother (Mother Earth)  Crone: From Wise to Witch  The Fool  The Magician  The Hero  Colors  White/Black  Numbers  3- Holy Trinity  4- Limbs/Seasons  6- Evil/Devil  7- union of human+divine  MANY, MANY MORE!!!

 The Devil  The Old Woman  The Innocent Maiden  Light vs. Dark  Pink Ribbons  “Faith  “Goodman” “Young” (versus Brown)  Forrest  Snake Staff  Sunrise/Sunset  Colors  Village  Threshold

 Read: “The Birthmark”  Mark the following notes:  Make notes on content, symbolism, and light and dark imagery.  Where is proof of the Puritan element?  What is the moral of the story?