79 pages • 2 hours read
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Use these activities to engage all types of learners, while requiring that they refer to and incorporate details from the text over the course of the activity.
ACTIVITY 1: “Painting a Picture”
Ethan Frome contains many vivid descriptions of the Massachusetts landscape in winter. For this activity, choose one description that you find particularly interesting or evocative and create a piece of visual art inspired by it.
Teaching Suggestion: The winter landscape is one of Ethan Frome’s most prominent motifs, contributing to the novel’s mood and echoing its ideas about the futility of human action in the face of vast natural forces. At the same time, the natural world is also a source of great beauty and wonder for characters like Ethan and Mattie. This tension provides students with ample room for creative interpretation; although their statements about the work they create do not need to be extensive or deeply analytical, look for implicit links to the novel’s tone, themes, and style.
ACTIVITY 2: “Character Case Notes”
Ethan Frome’s tight focus and relatively limited action mean that the personalities and relationship dynamics of its central trio—Ethan, Zeena, and Mattie—drive the narrative. In this activity you will create a short psychological profile of one of these characters.
Part A: Imagine that you are providing counseling to one of these characters. What might this conversation look like? In particular, consider the following:
Part B: Use your brainstorming in Part A to draft a three-part set of “case notes” for the character.
Teaching Suggestion: Ethan Frome is a character-driven novel, and this activity helps students tease out those characters’ traits, motivations, and beliefs about others. In particular, it prompts students to think about any disconnect between the ways the characters seem to view themselves (and their lives) and how a reasonably objective reader might view them (i.e., is Ethan really as powerless as he believes himself to be, or is this feeling a product of his temperament?). This in turn provides an opportunity to discuss the subject of Mattie and Ethan’s suicide attempt as a class: How else might these characters have tried to address their problems?
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By Edith Wharton