Transcript Slide 1

“Top Man”
by
James Ramsey Ullman
“I want to climb it because it is there”
(George Leigh Mallory, 1886-1924).
Exposition
Setting
Characterization
Connotation
Personification
Imagery
Conflict
Suspense
Climax
Symbolism
Inference
Irony
Theme
The part of the story that gives background information, such as
setting and initial characterization.
Pages 51-54 are all exposition.
Ullman tells us about K3 and each of eight men on the climbing
exposition.
Where and when events happen in the story.
Place: Kalpurtha (K3), in the Garhwal Himalayas, the fourth
highest peak in the world
Time: Sixth attempt at climbing K3. Summer.
How a writer reveals his or her
characters to the reader.
Methods
Direct (telling)
Indirect (showing)
~Actions
~Speech
~Thoughts
~Others’ reactions
Frank’s perceptions: Osborn
appeared to have a desire to
conquer while Nace remained
stoic, or emotionless, at the sight
of K3 (53).
“Wait? Why?” Osborn jerked his
head up…[He] snorted. “A lot of
good being acclimated will do, if
we have frozen feet.” / “Easy,
Paul, easy,” cautioned Randolph.
“It seems to me Martin’s right”
(53).
The emotions that a word or phrase makes you feel.
“The walk fell suddenly away, and we came out on the
edge of a bleak, boulder-strewn valley…And there it was”
(51).
“We were men bereft of everything but eyes, everything
but the single electric perception: there it was!” (52).
How does “there it was” make you feel?
What if Ullman wrote this instead: “Ahead of us was the
peak” ?
Human qualities are attributed to nonhuman things.
“The mountain, to all of us, was no longer a mere giant of rock and ice;
it had become a living thing, an enemy, watching us, waiting for us,
hostile, relentless, and aware” (51).
“…a white-hooded giant, secret and remote, but living. Living and on
guard” (52).
“The minutes crawled into hours…” (64).
Language that appeals to one of your senses.
“The wind rose. At first it was only sound-a remote, desolate moaning
in the night high above us-but soon it descended, suck down the
deep valley as if into a gigantic funnel. Hour after hour it howled
about the tents with hurricane frenzy, and the wild flapping of the
canvas dinned in our ears like machine-gun fire” (57).
Conflict
A struggle between two
opposite forces.
Types of Conflict
Man vs. Nature
Man vs. Man
Man vs. Self
Osborn vs. Nace
Osborn vs. K3
A literary device that makes the reader feel uncertain and tense about
what’s going to happen next.
Nace and Frank see Osborn standing on an unsupported cornice (65).
Can Nace get to Osborn before the snow and ice give out?
Will Nace be able to save Osborn?
The high or turning point of a story; the moment of greatest suspense.
Nace pulls Osborn to safety in an act that causes himself to fall off K3.
Something that has meaning beyond itself. An object stands for
something else.
Nace’s ax
~Remembrance: Nace’s respect for his lost friend
~Heroic effort: Nace sacrificed his own life to
rescue Osborn.
A reasonable conclusion made based on facts and clues.
What happened to Nace? Did he die?
How do you know?
Did Osborn make it to the top of K3?
How do you know?
The difference between what happens
and what is expected.
Types of Irony
Verbal: writer says something and
means another
Situational: events are different than
what was expected
Dramatic: reader knows something
that the character
doesn’t
Example:
We expected Nace to make it to
the summit based on his experience
and cautiousness instead of
Osborne, who is inexperienced and
impulsive.
An insight or truth about life that is revealed in
a work of literature.
Experience and caution is just as valuable as
youthful talent and ambition.
The ultimate sacrifice is giving one’s life to
save another.
Please write:
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Your name
2 Literary terms you are an expert on
1 Literary term you’re still unsure of