1. Essay Number 1
2. Essay Number 2
Crafting Narrative Order in Autobiographical Writing, BRIEF 1
2. (Page 98 in the textbook)
- The events in the story unfold chronologically: from the present (Tin gets bitten by a dog) to the past, including today's incident (Ngổ gets bitten by a dog this afternoon) → distant past (Ngổ's mischievous life with grandma) → back to the present (community evaluates today's dog bite incident) → towards the future (How will Ngổ escape and what lesson will be learned?)
- The storytelling sequence emphasizes the cause-and-effect relationship of the events, requiring readers to move from the present, reminisce about the past, contemplate the story's future, creating an engaging reading experience.
II. Practice: (page 98 in the textbook)
Question 1: (Pages 98, 99 in the textbook)
Answer hints:
a) + Two close friends in the same class. One friend recounts their feelings when meeting a neighbor with more advantages for the first time.
+ The friend recalls a time when the neighbor hung wet clothes on their clothesline, causing annoyance, so they retaliated by wetting the neighbor's clothes on one end of the line.
b) Events belonging to memories, recounted from the present. The narrative order follows chronological time: what happened first is narrated first, and subsequent events are narrated accordingly. Key events (neighbor hanging clothes on your line, going out in the rain but returning home to find neatly folded clothes) are described with a slower, more meticulous pace. Events naturally follow one another (due to jealousy, an unkind act towards the neighbor → facing difficulties, but the neighbor helps immediately after the unkind act, leading to a moving turn from animosity to friendship). The narrator refrains from inserting any commentary about the characters and events, allowing the narrative to objectively convey the storyteller's attitude. The storytelling order utilizes a contrasting device: Opening: two people dislike each other → Conclusion: two people become close friends; within the friendship section, event (1) is the friend's negative action towards the other, while event (2) is the positive action of the other friend towards the former.
In addition to the learned content, you should prepare for the upcoming lesson with the section Narrate the Innovations in Your Hometown to master your 6th-grade Vietnamese literature knowledge.
