Preview

The Swiss Family Robinson

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1158 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Swiss Family Robinson
Book Report
English III

The Swiss Family Robinson
By
Johann Wyss

Submitted by:
Patubo, Isaac Marvin S.
III – Saint Agatha
Submitted to:
Mr. Teddy P. Data
English Teacher
The Swiss Family Robinson
Johann David Wyss

I. Personal Background of the Author
Name: Johann David Wyss
Born: 4 March 1743 in Bern, Switzerland
Died: 11 January 1818
Nationality: Swiss
Lived: in Bern Switzerland
Children: four sons. His eldest son, Johann Rudolph Wyss, published The Swiss Family Robison in 1812 Johann Wyss was a typical family man; a loving husband and a caring father to his four sons. He was also very religious and he devoted much of his life to the Church and to the education of his children. In the eighteenth century, priest and clergymen were some of the most learned men in the country and Johann Wyss was certainly no exception. His detailed knowledge of geography, botany, and wildlife is used to great effect in The Swiss Family Robinson.
Johann Wyss grew up in Bern, a peaceful and prosperous city in Switzerland. He remained in Bern for most of his adult life, apart from a brief stint as a military priest in his twenties, when he travelled around Europe with a Swiss regiment.
Writing and telling stories were just a hobby for Johann. His main job was as a pastor in his home town, a job he kept for most of his adult life. In 1803, he retired to his country home in Köeniz, where he grew fruits and kept bees.
The Swiss Family Robinson started life as an extended bedtime story that Johann would tell to his four sons. The famous story of Robinson Crusoe, written by Daniel Defoe in 1719, inspired Wyss’s idea of shipwrecked family – but Wyss made sure that there were parents on his island too, to instruct and guide the younger children.

II. Complete Pages
472 pages
Chapter 1 – page 1 - 24
Chapter 2 – page 25 - 57
Chapter 3 – page 58 - 94
Chapter 4 – page 95 - 116
Chapter 5 – page 117 - 136
Chapter 6 – page 137 - 161
Chapter 7 – page 162

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Growing up in is native city he became a merchant, he was a deacon in the local Dutch reformed congregation. Minuit established himself as a church deacon and a diamond cutter. In August 1613 he married Gertrude Raedts, the daughter of a burgomaster.…

    • 110 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Irene loved children, but didn’t have children in her life. Until she was married to her husband. Her daughter’s name is Janina Opdyke Smith and she also helped this book come to life.…

    • 467 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    He was cultured and unsentimental. He had more concern for outsiders than for his own family. He and his wife were storekeepers.…

    • 1758 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Phil’s relationship with his family is another place where Goodman uses rhetorical devices to place heavy fault on him. The image created as she writes about his eldest son “researching his father” by scouring the neighborhood talks of the distance in their relationship. Their family dynamic is obviously strangly skewed from what would normally be expected in a household. Seeing as the children’s relationship with their mother is intact, Goodman must be trying to communicate with the audience that Phil is to be held accountable. Another image of Phil’s faults are created as Goodman talks about the dynamic within Phil’s marriage, stating that his wife stopped believing she was more important than his work years ago, “when the children were small.”…

    • 241 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The author who wrote hundreds of children's books Joseph Bruchac grew up in the small town of Greenfield, New York. His grandma graduated at Albany Law school and kept books at the house which Joseph started to read and wanted to write his own books. His grandpa owned a little general store and his grandpa showed him how to walk quietly in the woods and how to fish. Joseph Bruchac promotes Native American Culture through his works Our Stories Remembers, Code Talkers, and Children of the Longhouse.…

    • 520 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Another way his family influenced his career is that they he was from a family of goldsmiths. This influenced his career because he had knowledge of…

    • 456 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ordinary People (1980) tells the story of the Jarrett’s, an upper-middle class family in Illinois, following the death of the eldest son, Buck, in a boating accident. It depicts what might happen to a family when a tragedy unexpectedly happens. The boating accident disrupted the Jarrett family’s normal developmental flow and inevitably produced relationship changes within the family system. While watching the film, the audience begins to understand that the boating accident was so disruptive and impeding to the family that they suddenly and profoundly shook up and transformed the family system so that it may never return to its former way of functioning (Goldenberg & Goldenberg, 2013). The film portrays many aspects of the premises of Structural Family Therapy (SFT) such as dysfunctional family boundaries, roles, and rules. In addition, it shows the breakdown of the family dynamic due to the grief of the loss of Buck and misplaced guilt within the family.…

    • 1391 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the movie Ordinary People, The Jarrett family is a prime example of a family being torn apart because of a lack of communication. The Jarrett family cannot Acknowledge the loss of Buck and attempted suicide by Conrad. The Jarrett family could benefit a lot from family therapy to help them communicate. Their overall dysfunction comes from a lack of communication and turning on each other at any moment. Throughout the movie, The Jarretts each display acts of “silence” and “violence” toward each other. They use these whenever a crucial conversation about Buck would arise. Conrad, Beth, and Calvin all use these mechanisms to avoid talking about the real issue causing undeniable dysfunction inside the Jarrett family.…

    • 348 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Heinrich Schliemann

    • 762 Words
    • 4 Pages

    After being forced to make his own living after school, he got an apprenticeship with Herr Holtz grocers. After 5 years in this job, which he hated, he fled to Hamburg and became a cabin boy on the ‘Dorothea'. The ship was wrecked off the coast of the Netherlands. He got a job in Amsterdam for an import/export company, and had learnt Russian and Greek, which enabled him to prosper in his position. He went to the United States for a short period and returned to Russia and married his first wife, Ekaterina. They had three children.…

    • 762 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    While reading the play The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams, the reader quickly learns of a, sadly, typical tale of family strife. In this play a family struggles to find the way out of their secluded, seemingly solitary life. Amanda Wingfield, the mother of Tom and Laura, only craves for the best for her kids. However, this ostensibly adoring mother puts Toms needs at the bottom of list. As a family without a father figure Tom, being the only boy, steps up to help his mother and sister. Striving to live up to his father’s memory, Tom helps by paying for the rent while putting his personal goals on hold. The Wingfield family goes through much trouble and strife portraying the sad truth of what goes on in the everyday family and home.…

    • 892 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Dawn, by Elie Wiesel

    • 724 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Elie Wiesel was born on September28,1928 in the town of Hungary. Wiesel went through a lot of hard times as a youngster. In 1944, Wiesel was deported by the nazis and taken to the concentration camps. His family was sent to the town of Auschwitz. The father, mother, and sister of Wiesel died in the concentration camps. His older sister and himself were the only to survive in his family. After surviving the concentration camps, Wiesel moved to Paris, where he studied literature at the Sorbonne from 1948-1951. Since 1949 he has worked as a foreign correspondent…

    • 724 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Otto Dix

    • 2227 Words
    • 9 Pages

    Otto Dix was born Wilhelm Heinrich Otto Dix on December 2, 1891 to Ernst Franz Dix and Pauline Louise Dix. Wilhelm was the eldest son of the four surviving children in the Dix Family, although his older brother would die seven years before Otto’s’ birth and his youngest sibling would die within a year of her life (art-directory). He was raised in Untermhaus, Germany, located on the outskirts of Gera. Franz Dix was an iron foundry worker and Louise was a seamstress as well as a retired poet. Franz taught his children how the social classes functioned and how there would always be someone above them, as well as someone below them.…

    • 2227 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Peter Paul Rubens

    • 1204 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Rubens was born in Siegen, Westphalia, to Jan Rubens and Maria Pypelincks. Born the son of a lawyer and educated at a Jesuit school in Antwerp, Flanders, Rubens learned classical and modern languages. He spent the years 1600 to 1608 studying and working in Italy. Returning to Antwerp, he continued to travel as both courtier and painter. His repeated visits to Madrid, Paris, and London allowed him to negotiate treaties while accepting royal commissions for art.…

    • 1204 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    A Brooklyn Family Tale

    • 763 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The whole movie deals with emotions and how they grow up in that environment and that reflects in next generation’s life. Their perceptions are a lot different from my culture. One thing that I felt from this movie is whatever you see from parents or elder siblings, most of the time you will follow that way and it’s also happen in my culture also. Twenty years ago at about the same time that "Cisco" and "Stingray" Santiago became leaders of the notorious Assassination gang and Luis also became a gang leader. That movie is also a great example of emotional intelligence. This movie is kind of empathetic.…

    • 763 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ancient History

    • 1020 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Heinrich Schliemann's life was a rags-to-riches story. A poor, uneducated, and motherless boy rose through his hard work lifestyle to the highest heights of wealth. Schliemann travelled the world and learned its languages, married a Greek bride, and together they discovered the treasures of Troy and the citadel of Agamemnon, thereby fulfilling the dream he had chased since childhood.…

    • 1020 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays