LE 300 Week 6 Discussion | Park University | Assignment Help
- Park University / LE 300
- 21 May 2021
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- Humanities Assignment Help / Educational Assignment Help
LE 300 Week 6 Discussion | Park University | Assignment Help
Instructions
Please choose
two of the following questions to answer for this unit by
Wednesday at 11:59pm (CST). You should also respond to two of your
classmates' postings by Sunday at 11:59pm (CST).
Before answering this
unit's questions, you should view a Frankenstein film of your own choosing.
IMDB.com lists over 385 choices, when you search by the title character's name,
so be creative in your choice. Also, you should complete Mary Shelley's
novel Frankenstein.
Keep in mind, as you view the film and read
the novel, a few of the questions posted below.
Directions
Full-bodied entries—of at least ten sentences
of writing from you (in addition to quotations from the text)—are more likely
to receive full credit. Lesser credit will be assigned to work that is missing,
brief, or clearly disengaged or sloppily produced such that miscues interfere
with readability.
Your responses to other students’ work are
also assessed. Students often resist commenting on each others’ work in
substantial ways; instead choosing to post simply “good job” or “looks okay to
me.” This kind of peer response doesn’t help your own—or your
peers’—development as a writer and thinker.
Acceptable peer responses will, among other
things:
·
Explicitly identify what was learned from someone else’s work.
·
Ask a follow-up question.
·
Offer an alternative interpretation.
·
Offer concrete strategies for improvement.
Questions (Film/Novel)
Choose two questions to answer:
1. Describe your chosen
film for your classmates. As part of the description, show us what you believe
the film's argument and focus to be. What genre would your film fit in? How
does your film develop similarities or differences with the novel?
2. What do you believe
the ultimate argument of the novel Frankenstein to be? How can we develop this
argument as part of a class in serial killer media? As this is the only novel
that we'll be reading from the 18th century, how does this older work inform
the writings that we have thus far read in class?
3. Why does
Frankenstein's monster kill in the novel? This is a deceptively simple
question, so let me elaborate just a bit. What is his reason and motive for
revenge? How does the monster admit that all of his killing could have been
avoided? What moral burden does this place on us as readers?