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Lesson Plan: Writing about a Symbol

Author: B. Wu, Murry Bergtraum HS, New York, N.Y.
Subject: English
Grade Level: 9-12

Overview:
This lesson is designed to assist students in identifying a person, object, or event as symbolic in works of literature. Through the discussion of many references to animals and storm in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, students can more effectively identify symbolism instead of labeling everything as a symbol.

Objective:
This lesson will review the characteristics of symbols and students will demonstrate their understanding of the concept by identifying at least three symbols in Julius Caesar and write a coherent composition about 250 words on symbolism.

Materials: Shakespeare's Julius Caesar

Activities and Procedures:
  1. Begin the class with a discussion and analysis of Act III, Scene I, and Act V, Scene i. What might these animal images be doing in a play about politics and human affairs or human nature?( references to "deer", "eagle", "ravens, crows, kites")
  2. What might be symbolized by the storm and the other disturbances on the eve of Caesar's death(Act I, Scene iii:the conversation between Casca and Cassius, their observation of the natural phenomena)
  3. What might the apparition of Caesar's ghost in Act V, Scene iii, symbolize?
  4. Summary of the discussion:
  5. When you are asked to write about the symbol in a work, you will most possibly answer an essay question like the following," Select a central symbol from a work of literature. State what symbol reveals about the characters and the theme."
  6. Prewriting:
  7. Writing paragraph by paragraph:
Assessment:
The final essay on the topic- "Symbolism in Julius Caesar"

Follow-up Activities:
Following this discussion, have students explore other meanings which might be implied in the symbols they chose to write about in Julius Caesar.