What is a memoir?As a literary genre, a memoir (from the
French: mémoire from the Latin memoria, meaning "memory", or a reminiscence), forms a subclass of autobiography –Memoir is autobiographical writing, but not all autobiographical writing follows the criteria for memoir, as you will see. The author of a memoir may be referred to as a memoirist.
This first unit in grade 10 will see you all become memorists!
What makes a memoir a memoir?It focuses and reflects on the relationship
between the writer and a particular person, place, animal, or object.
It explains the significance of the relationship.It leaves the reader with one impression of the
subject of the memoir.It is limited to a particular phase, time period,
place, or recurring behavior in order to develop the focus fully.
It makes the subject of the memoir come alive.It maintains a first person point of view.
Memoirs come in many forms:PoemsSongsPersonal Narrative EssaysNovels (Memoirs of a Geisha, Like Family:
Growing up in Other People’s Houses A Memoir, Memoir of a Boy Soldier)
Six Word Memoirs at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yQT6PfISRoM
In the video you just viewed…The following memoirs were included:
“ Slightly genius; worry won’t change the world” – Jacquie“My goal has always been retiremement” “ My best friend was a wallflower” - Chelsea“Live life while you have it” “A traveler homesick for bigger skies” “16 years with pencil in hand” – Wes Floyd“Donuts make life so much sweeter!” - Gracie“Never walked down life’s pathways alone” - Megan“ Sleeping in class is my forte” - Whitney
“ enjoy your worries; they’ll soon leave” - Cresse“ karma lever liked me very much”“Life should be walked through nature.”“ I am what I am: expressive” – Allison B“Let go of negative things today.” – Skirt“Been there, done that, got t-shirt” – Jake“ I think I thought too much” – Sunny Burell“Found happiness singing in my hairbrush” – Allison“ Missing: Crazy person with curly hair.” – Charlie“Happily ran away with my imagination.” – Junius
Wright
Reading our first memoir: When reading, good readers make
connections, question, visualize, infer, and synthesize. Good readers make connections to the books they read either by connecting it to another book they have read (text-to-text) or to something in their own life (text-to-self).
Connections:Does this story remind you of anything
from your own life (text-to-self connection)?Does this story remind you of another
story, movie, poem, song (text-to-text connection)?
These connections are what engage good readers.
When reading memoirs as a writer we ask the following types of questions: Who is the story about?• What is the relationship between the
subject and the writer?• What is the writer’s purpose? In other
words, what does the writer want you to know about this relationship?• What is the one impression that the writer
wants you to have about his/her subject?• How does the writer show you how
important his/her subject is in the
piece? Through his/her thoughts? Through his/her feelings about the
subject? Through the details and description?
• Does he/she share memories of experiences or events that he/she shared
with the person?• Where is this person now?• What are the writer’s thoughts or feelings
about this person now? (Theseare his/her insights.)