What are examples of context?

Context

Context refers to the background or details surrounding an event that occurs in literature. Details about the setting, a character's past, or even the time period of the story can help to set the context. Understanding the context can help a reader to better understand and interpret the events of the plot.

Examples of Context:

To fully understand the plot of a story set during the Civil War, the reader must understand something about the context, or something about the Civil War and how it affected families in the United States.

Understanding the Industrial Revolution and the effects on life in England during the 1800s would help a reader to better understand the romantic movement in literature.

Examples from Literature:

A reader should understand something of the conflict between the British and the Irish in the 20th Century to understand this poem by William Butler Yeats, an Irish poet. These two stanzas of the poem are an example:

Easter 1916

I have met them at close of day Coming with vivid faces From counter or desk among grey Eighteenth-century houses. I have passed with a nod of the head Or polite meaningless words, Or have lingered awhile and said Polite meaningless words, And thought before I had done Of a mocking tale or a gibe To please a companion Around the fire at the club, Being certain that they and I But lived where motley is worn: All changed, changed utterly:

A terrible beauty is born.


Too long a sacrifice Can make a stone of the heart. O when may it suffice? That is Heaven's part, our part To murmur name upon name, As a mother names her child When sleep at last has come On limbs that had run wild. What is it but nightfall? No, no, not night but death; Was it needless death after all? For England may keep faith For all that is done and said. We know their dream; enough To know they dreamed and are dead; And what if excess of love Bewildered them till they died? I write it out in a verse- MacDonagh and MacBride And Connolly and Pearse Now and in time to be, Wherever green is worn, Are changed, changed utterly:

A terrible beauty is born.


To fully understand Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird, the reader must understand something of the context of the Jim Crow South and the discrimination against blacks.


To fully understand George Orwell's Animal Farm, which is a satire of the Russian Revolution and the rise of communism, the reader must understand something about the context of the Russian Revolution and communism in the Soviet Union.


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What are examples of context?
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Context means the setting of a word or event. If your friend is furious at you for calling her your worst enemy, remind her that the context of those remarks was Opposite Day.

Context comes from the Latin for how something is made. It was first used to talk about writing, as in "the beautiful phrase occurs in the context of the concluding paragraph." We use it now to talk about any circumstance in which something happens. You might say that you can't understand what happens without looking at the context. When someone takes your words but makes it sound like you meant something else, they've taken your words out of context.

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One of the first words I teach in my 7th grade English class is CONTEXT, because it’s pivotal to understanding what gives everything meaning — from literature to life.

What are examples of context?
A frog in the context of a pond is lovely…

What is Context?

The definition of the word “context” can be summarized as: all the stuff around something: time, place, surroundings, circumstances, etc. If you want to get your full body into comprehending context, do the “Context Dance” in which you point in all directions around you, singing, “All this is my current contexttttt!”

Why is Context Important?

Context changes EVERYTHING. On paper, the surroundings of a word in a sentence can utterly alter its meaning. This is why “context clues” are so important in helping infer the nuances of a definition. Want another reason to answer the question, “Why is context important? In person, context can change the same object from delightful to disgusting. Let’s look…

What are examples of context?
A frog in the context of your bed is terrifying.

Context Examples!

Our first example features a jolly green frog. In the context featured in the first illustration from this article, the animal is sitting pretty on a flowered lily pad. Delightful! Unfortunately, change the context, and that frog becomes a terror. How would YOU react if you found him, as he is in my drawing above, with his slimy rear placed upon your pink pillow??? Ew!

More Context Sentences and Scenarios:

Our second example shows how a shift in context turns the same object from comfort to stressor: a simple ice cream cone! In my illustration below, a chap is taking a stroll on a spring day with three scoops of frozen dessert deliciousness. Bliss…

What are examples of context?
Ice cream is relaxing in springtime.

A Change of Context…

POOF! All of a sudden, imagine the context is flipped from a balmy environment to… an inferno of flames and scorching fire! Why is context important? With this altered context, the relaxed licking of the cone turns into a frenzy to salvage the frozen treat with chomps and gulps as it pours down. Argh!

What are examples of context?
A flaming context makes frozen dessert stressful!

Words and Actions in Context

Now that you see how a simple frog or cone can completely change meaning with a shift in context, imagine what context can do to alter the impact of your own words and actions. It’s something to always be aware of.

Immediate Context vs. Broader

What entrance me to no end are the LAYERS of context that build up — from immediate to broader contexts. Each of those layers must be taken into account to understand the full meaning of whatever you’re looking at. Let’s examine the creation of this article as an example to show context layers, from zoomed in to zoomed out!

First Layer of Context: I drew a frog with a pond around her. That pond is the immediate context of the frog in the drawing I created.

Second Layer: Taking a step back from the frog, MY immediate context while drawing was that I was being jumped upon by my two young kids on the couch while we’re staying with family in Ohio. My cuties kept jostling my stylus on the screen, forcing me to repeatedly erase and re-draw lines. How does learning that context help you in terms of understanding this article and its strange and creative drawings?

Third Layer: The BROADER context is that I’m drawing and writing this in July 2020. (This will be the historical context for those reading this at a later date.) This date is significant because across the globe this year, we have all become intensely aware of how the changed context around us shifts every aspect of our lives, every day. An action or utterance that would have been simple before is now either impossible or fraught.

Does that broader historical context illuminate why I chose to teach about the concept of context today???

Video: Context Illustration Process

https://youtu.be/dUkMOtqdqbM

Watch how my mind wandered, erased, and created!

Don’t Be Out of Context

As with our lessons on liminal spaces, foreshadowing, common homophones, figurative language, literary devices, and juxtaposition, I hope you can see that these “dusty ELA vocabulary words” are actually highly relevant to our lives. When we forget about context or leave it out, meaning and purpose are lost.

Part of becoming a responsible adult is learning how to fit our actions to any given context — even if that context changes over time and we must adapt. For example, as we grow, we learn not to wear just our underwear in a public context, and we learn which words and actions might be disrespectful or even hurtful, given any given broader context. (For more, see “Why is School Important?”)

Why is context important? Being mindful of context is not just important for our own decisions, but also to understand the world around us. For instance, the next time you read a book, watch a show, or look at a piece of art, really consider the context its creators were working with. How did their immediate and broader or historical contexts impact their choices in how and what they created? How might knowing that context influence your understanding of that piece? Often it’s worth the time to look up some of that background for a richer experience.

How might considering context even help relationships with those around you?

Do use the comment section below to share any stories or insights around how context has impacted your real life, or to ask any questions! I look forward to hearing from you, and as always, invite your drawing requests.

What are examples of context?

What are examples of context?

What are examples of context?

What are examples of context?

The author and artist, Lillie Marshall, is a National Board Certified Teacher of English who has been a public school educator since 2003, and an experienced Reiki practitioner since 2018. All art on this site is original and hand-drawn by Lillie. She launched DrawingsOf.com Educational Cartoons in 2020, building upon the success of her other two sites, AroundTheWorldL.com (established 2009) and TeachingTraveling.com (founded 2010). Subscribe to Lillie’s monthly newsletter, and follow @WorldLillie on social media to stay connected!

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What are examples of context?