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      Best Books Study Work Guide: The Lighthouse Keeper’s Wife

      for Grade 10 Home Language

      Written by Charles J. Fourie

      Compiled by

      Peter Southey

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      The layout in this digital edition of the Best Books Study Work Guide: The Lighthouse Keeper’s Wife for Grade 10 Home Language may differ from that of the printed version, depending on the settings on your reader. The layout displays optimally if you use the default setting on your reader. Readers can experiment with the settings to enhance display.

      The page references in this version refer to the pages in the printed book.

      In instances where learners are asked to ‘answer the questions below’ the questions may appear on the next page depending on the device being used.

      References to the back cover of the book refer to the About the book section in this version.

      Foreword to the learners

      You cannot study this study work guide instead of studying the play itself. The two must be used together. Your edition of the play includes a great deal of information about the playwright and about the background to the play and the play itself. This study work guide helps you to understand these notes and it also adds to them, using page numbers to refer you to the page you need to have open in your copy of the play. The main purpose of the study work guide is to provide explanations and questions that will lead you to a fuller understanding of the play itself.

      The author and publishers

      Analysis and questions

      Foreword (p. iv)

      1.Before you begin to study something new it is helpful to search your mind for what you already know about the new matter. You have probably never heard of Freytag’s Pyramid, but what about the other items in the list? Write down what you understand the four terms below to mean.

      Character

      Plot

      Setting

      Stage directions

      2. Exactly how are you going to be studying this play (actual)? Would you prefer to be studying it in some other way (ideal)? Place ticks in the boxes that apply to you in the table below.

ActualIdeal
Studying it on my own as a text
The teacher reads the whole play aloud in class, taking all parts*
Play reading in class; four learners active, the others following in their books
Simultaneous play reading in class in groups of four
Stage production with costumes and props

      *This approach is not included in the Foreword, but it does happen.

      Key features (p. 1)

      1.This section lists the ways in which drama differs from other genres. Once you have read through it, write down what novels and short stories have in common with drama: in what ways is prose fiction similar to drama?

      2.How does it differ?

      Introduction to The Lighthouse Keeper’s Wife (p. 2)

      1. What is “drama”? (p. 2)

      In your own words explain what “the suspension of disbelief” means in this context: “I like going to movies with my friend Casper because we’re equally willing to suspend our disbelief.”

      2. Character and characterisation (pp. 2 & 3)

      Based on what we are told in this section, place ticks in the appropriate boxes in the table below:

Type of characterStella LamprechtThe other three characters(Plaatjes, Adriaan Lamprecht and Barney)
Major character
Minor character
Round character
Flat character
Dynamic character
Static character
Protagonist
Antagonist

      3. Plot (p. 3)

      In this section, the key word for a clear understanding of “plot” is written in italics. Write it in the space provided below and then explain what it means.

      Word:

      Meaning:

      4. Conflict (p. 4)

      From p. 3 of the section on Character and characterisation, quote a phrase that tells us something about the conflict in this play.

      5. Structure (pp. 4 & 5)

      Fill in key words in the table below to summarise the application of Freytag’s Pyramid to The Lighthouse Keeper’s Wife.

StructureApplying this to The Lighthouse Keeper’s Wife
Exposition
Rising action
Climax
Falling action
Dénouement

      6. Setting (p. 5)

      This section tells us that “The setting in The Lighthouse Keeper’s Wife is particularly important” but we are not told what that setting is. Read the sections on Robben Island and the lighthouse on pp. 8 and 9 and then describe the setting in one or two sentences.

      7. Stage directions (p. 5)

      Add a sentence here to the notes you wrote for question 3 above, explaining how a novelist deals with the information that a playwright provides in stage directions.

      8. Dialect

      Read through Plaatjes’ speech on pp. 11 and 12 and quote an example from it of each of the following:

       Dutch:

       Cape coloured slang:

       An African language:

      9. Theme (p. 6)

      We read here that “As each boat is about ready to launch, a prison warder destroys it and the prisoner has to start over.”

      What is your view about what the warder did? What is your view about the prisoner’s reaction?

      Answer one of these questions by stating your point of view in general terms. (This would be a theme if YOU were writing the play.)

      10. About the author

      List the four cities mentioned in the text box on p. 7 in which Charles Fourie’s plays have been produced.

      About the play

      1. Robben Island

      In the table below fill in the approximate dates during which those listed in the first column were kept on Robben Island.

CaptivesFromUntil
Khoikhoi
Xhosa captives during the Frontier Wars
Tuberculosis patients
Lepers and the mentally ill
Political prisoners (maximum security prison)
Convicted criminals (medium security prison)

      Oddly enough, the so-called mentally ill (“lunatics”) included homeless people, prostitutes with sexually transmitted diseases, alcoholics and those

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