Tuesday, June 17, 2014

REVIEW TEXT ( MATERIALS FOR SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL TWELFTH GRADER)


REVIEW TEXT
Review text is a text which summarizes, criticizes, responds, and analyses to the art works. People can review TV shows, books, dramas, movies, operas, exhibitions, music concerts and so on.
As other texts in English, review text also has its own generic structure.
The generic structure as follows         :
1.      Orientation
In this part the reviewer will tell the background of the text
2.      Interpretative recount
the characters and the plot of the text will be attached by the reviewer in this part.
3.      Evaluation
It consists of concluding statements, judgement, and opinions.
4.      Evaluation summation
It tells about the last opinion consisting of the appraisal of the art work that is being reviewed.
Language features of a review text are focusing on a specific participant, using adjectives, using long and complex clauses, and using metaphor.


Here is the example of reviewed text, and your task is you have to define its generic structure!

                                                                THE PEARL


The pearl by John Steinbeck is the retelling of a legend about a fisherman who finds a huge pearl. Realizing that the discovery is destroying his life, he returns the pearl into the sea.
It is told in an authentic style that readers feel like they are hearing the story from one of the villagers that knows all of the characters. In spite of its apparent simplicity, however, there are several levels to appreciate in reading The Pearl.
Some critics have pointed out that the author was committed to ecology. This book was really about his statements about the dangers of creating an imbalance in the natural environment. When the fisherman throws the pearl back into the sea, he is restoring the natural order. In fact, Steinbeck was a member of an expedition to explore marine life along the Gulf of California when he heard the legend of the ‘pearl of the world.’
Other critics have suggested that Steinbeck’s concern for the condition of the working class was reflected in the relationships among the characters. The priest becomes interested in the poor fisherman’s family after the pearl is found because he hopes to receive a donation that will enable him to improve his church. The doctor who has refused to treat the fisherman’s baby in the past is solicitous when it becomes known that the fisherman has found a valuable pearl. At even more direct example of exploitation is the way that the pearl merchants take advantages of the fisherman in the village.
Finally, the work has been interpreted as an allegory of human desire, the vanity of material wealth,and the struggle between good and evil. Although the fisherman had dreamed of buying peace and happiness with the pearl, he realizes that these spiritual gifts are beyond price. They cannot be purchased. Steinbeck himself writes in the introduction. “ If this story is a parable, perhaps everyone takes his own meaning from it and reads his own life into it.”
Precisely this latitude for personal interpretation within universal themes gives The Pearl such enduring appeal.  



SUMBER : MASMEDIA

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