A Doll's House
The World's Wife
History of Gender
Language Techniques
Visual Techniques
100

A symbol of Nora's fiery side - a break from the mild-mannered wife. 

The Tarantella. 
100

The first poem in the collection.

Little Red Cap

100

The author of The Feminine Mystique (1963).

Betty Friedan

100

Difference between macro and micro techniques. 

Macro: larger-scale features of texts, including those relevant to form (e.g. structure, poetic devices, voice).

Micro: small-scale features of language (e.g. literary, visual)

100

The most noticeable point in an image. 

Salient point.

200

Ibsen's response when controversy arose from his play's ending. 

Rewrote the ending himself.

200

Duffy was poet laureate of the UK until 2019. What does that mean?

A poet officially appointed by a government or conferring institution, typically expected to compose poems for special events and occasions.

200

The three waves of feminism, and their foci. 

First Wave: Property/right to vote.

Second Wave: Equality/anti-discrimination. 

Third Wave: backlash against privileging strait white women. 

200

The eight parts of speech.

noun, pronoun, adjective, verb, adverb, preposition, conjunction, interjection

200

Lines which take our eye around an image/page. 

Vector lines.

300

The theatrical movement the play is a part of. 

Realism. 

300

The final words of "Mrs Beast". Bonus 100 points for analysis. 

"Let the less loving one be me." Imperative.

300

Feminist poet who wrote "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings."

Maya Angelou

300

The vocabulary of a person or branch of knowledge.

Lexicon
300
Visual and written complement each other to provide contrast.

Interplay of visuals and written text.

400

Nora's foil, and why.

Mrs Linde - lack of privilege, sensible worldview, care for parent. 

400

Finish this line from "Eurydice": "But the Gods are like..."

"publishers,/usually male,"

400

First nation to give women the vote in 1893.

New Zealand

400

Which technique is used: "intimate strangers"

Oxymoron 

400

How full or sparse an image is with people/objects.

Density

500

The nurse (Anne-Marie) represents these gendered concerns.  

Sacrifice, giving up children, economic instability, reliance on men for financial purposes.

500

Name 3 other women who are inspiration for poems in the collection we HAVEN'T studied. 

  • Thetis - Thetis
  • "Queen Herod" -- Herod the Great
  • "Mrs Midas" -- Midas
  • "from Mrs Tiresias" -- Tiresias
  • "Pilate's Wife" -- Pontius Pilate's wife
  • "Mrs Aesop" -- Aesop
  • "Mrs Darwin" -- Charles Darwin
  • "Mrs Sisyphus" -- Sisyphus
  • "Mrs Faust" -- Faust
  • "Delilah" -- Delilah
  • "Anne Hathaway" -- Shakespeare's Wife
  • "Queen Kong" -- King Kong
  • "Mrs Quasimodo" -- Quasimodo
  • "Medusa" -- Medusa
  • "The Devil's Wife" -- Moors Murders
  • "Circe" -- Circe
  • "Mrs Lazarus" -- Lazarus of Bethany
  • "Pygmalion"s Bride" -- Pygmalion
  • "Mrs Rip Van Winkle" -- "Rip Van Winkle"
  • "Mrs Icarus" -- Icarus
  • "Frau Freud" -- Sigmund Freud
  • "Salome" -- Salome
  • "The Kray Sisters" -- Kray Twins
  • "Elvis's Twin Sister" -- Elvis Presley
  • "Pope Joan" -- Pope Joan
  • "Penelope" -- Penelope
  • "Demeter" -- 
500

The difference between "equality", "equity", and "justice".

Equality: all benefit from same supports.

Equity: supports provided on basis of need. 

Justice: supports unnecessary because cause of injustice is removed. 

500

A phrase/expression specific to cultures. 

Idiom

500

The three spaces/sections of composition.

foreground, background, peripherals