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This video defines symbolism and analyzes the use of symbolism in stories like The Great Gatsby and To Kill a Mockingbird. What effect do symbols h...
The micro setting: Enterprise. The macro setting: “Space, the Final Frontier!”
This video defines theme and investigates how it’s used in literature—is it intentional? In this video, we discuss the difference between theme...
Power in Literature Short Stories: Part 2 513 Views
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Description:
The micro setting: Enterprise. The macro setting: “Space, the Final Frontier!”
Transcript
- 00:01
We speak student!
- 00:03
Power in Literature: Setting
- 00:07
a la Shmoop.
- 00:08
Okay so let's shift a little bit and talk about setting.
- 00:13
Another very important tool used by authors.
Full Transcript
- 00:17
What is setting?
- 00:19
Setting is basically everything. [ancient Egypt]
- 00:22
It's the backdrop of the story. That can be the historical context,
- 00:26
both time and place, it can be
- 00:29
the micro setting meaning as opposed to the macro setting which is the big
- 00:33
setting of you know, 1920's New York [old 1920s movie]
- 00:38
it can be the micro setting: Gatsby's house. [view of mansion]
- 00:41
The smaller location where something takes place.
- 00:45
And setting can also be kind of a mental state
- 00:48
if there's a story that takes place completely in someone's mind [guy's mind pops open with springs]
- 00:51
that is the setting like their chronic mind or whatever the case is but yes
- 00:56
setting is basically the context and the backdrop for the story
- 00:58
How should we assess the story or setting in its context?
- 01:02
One of the main things we learn from the Great Gatsby
- 01:05
about the nineteen twenties
- 01:06
is that alcohol was illegal
- 01:09
and it was everywhere and we kind of see this prohibition [police fighting gangs]
- 01:12
era, you know, crazy party life happening and this is something that you know [people dancing]
- 01:17
maybe we didn't learn about in seventh or eighth grade history,
- 01:19
and then we come in we read this book for the first time in ninth grade,
- 01:22
and we're like, "wait, what's the big deal these people are all over 21?"
- 01:27
"Oh! Oh alcohol was illegal," and then we learn this whole new historical
- 01:31
concept so you don't just have to know about the literature you have to know about the history too
- 01:35
and you can't have one without the other so historical setting is hugely
- 01:38
important in all literature.
- 01:41
How does setting convey the author's message?
- 01:44
We have kind of the macro setting again that means the bigger
- 01:47
backdrop setting. In the Hunger Games, which is
- 01:50
post-apocalyptic North America. [the Terminator in a wasteland]
- 01:52
"Come with me if you want to live."
- 01:54
we're in the same place that we live right now but
- 01:57
you know however many years in the future once there's been a clear war and
- 02:01
you know everything's about to, you know what [nuclear explosion]
- 02:04
But we also have these micro settings for example the Capitol
- 02:07
everyone's dressed up to the nines and they have created
- 02:10
outfits and makeup all this insane stuff and then you have District 13
- 02:14
where everything is just dreary, dark the reason that District 13 is like that is
- 02:19
because it's a mining town [miner walks across screen]
- 02:20
so there happened to be mines in District 13 and that
- 02:23
dictates what the setting it so those are two very
- 02:27
distinct micro settings within one larger macro setting.
- 02:30
Got it, makes sense. So apply the same logic
- 02:34
to a couple of other books: Catcher in the Rye,
- 02:36
Twilight, maybe To Kill a Mockingbird
- 02:38
Yeah, sure
- 02:39
so Catcher in the Rye, New York City is basically a character [New York City building with googly-eyes]
- 02:43
in the story, everything that happens to Holden happens because he's
- 02:48
in New York City we think about
- 02:49
Central Park and just kind of him being on buses and public transportation [guy riding the underground]
- 02:53
this isn't stuff that necessarily happens in other locations sometimes the setting can be
- 02:57
so powerful that it becomes a character in itself, you mentioned Twilight
- 03:01
Forks, Washington it takes place up there because it's dark
- 03:05
there's no sun the vampires can live without being exposed you know imagine
- 03:10
if it had taken place in
- 03:12
LA, it would've ended two pages in [Vampire in front of Hollywood sign explodes]
- 03:15
To Kill a Mockingbird takes place you know in
- 03:19
pre-civil rights America and
- 03:22
we kind of see this tension where Scout like sees what's happening
- 03:27
and African Americans are treated terribly and she kinda doesn't get it
- 03:30
but you know we get to see into the heart of
- 03:33
exactly what was going on before that'll happen.
- 03:37
Do authors use setting to tell their story?
- 03:40
The authors writing what they know it maybe comes a little bit more naturally
- 03:43
and they're not necessarily
- 03:44
having think about it that hard, if you're writing something
- 03:47
that is a vampire, dystopian, futuristic whatever [happy vampire and the Terminator in wasteland]
- 03:52
if you're writing something that you don't know well or something that doesn't exist
- 03:56
fantasy stories that's when you you have to really become a world builder
- 04:00
people like Tolkien or JK Rowling [Tolkien holds ring of power while Rowling holds a wand]
- 04:04
like these people had to create a world from scratch and those are the people
- 04:09
that have to be very focused on setting.
- 04:11
Okay, makes a ton of sense.
- 04:13
What is setting?
- 04:15
How should we assess the story/setting in its context?
- 04:20
How does setting convey the author's message?
- 04:23
Do authors use setting to tell their story?
- 04:28
"Come with me if you want to live"
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