Today we are going to discuss yesterday's assignment, review some poetry terminology, and look at some poetry by e.e. cummings and Margaret Atwood.
We will also look at AP Classroom.
Elements: Know both definitions and examples
Imagery, denotation,
connotation, irony – verbal, situational, dramatic, sarcasm, metaphor,
personification, metonymy, apostrophe, synecdoche, symbol, allegory,
paradox, overstatement, understatement, allusion, tone, alliteration,
assonance, consonance, internal rime, slant rime, end rime, approximate
rime, refrain, meter, iamb, trochee, anapest, dactyl, spondee,
monosyllabic foot, line, stanza, cacophony, caesura, enjambment,
onomatopoeia
For the next four weeks, you'll be posting two literary terms definition
with examples on your blog. These are due by Monday. It would be best
if everyone chooses different terms to define (that way you can all
share notes):
Literary Devices
AP English
Every
discipline employs a special vocabulary; literary criticism is no
exception. Literary criticism is based in part on the assumption that
writing is a purposeful activity and that excellent literature – work of
literary merit -- is not merely a happy accident. During the year I
will be encouraging you to familiarize yourself with some of the
terminology that is used in literary criticism. To that end, you will be
creating a glossary of literary devices that you encounter in your
reading. Below I have included a list of a few of the many devices you
will encounter while reading; you are in no way constrained to this
list, it’s just there for your information – to give you a small
sampling of the wonderful world of literary devices. There are hundreds
of devices that writers employ; you will no doubt find a few that I have
not heard of before.
allegory
alliteration
allusion
ambiguity
antagonist
analogy
apostrophe
archetype
aside
assonance
aubade
ballad
blank verse
cacophony
caesura
catharsis
character / flat, round
complication
conceit
connotation
colloquial diction
comedy
connotation
controlling metaphors
cosmic irony
denotation
dramatic irony
dramatic monologue
echo
elegy
epigram
existential character
extended metaphor
farce
flashback
formal diction
free verse
heroic couplet
hyperbole
imagery
informal diction
initiation story
metaphor
motif
myth
narrative structure
onomatopoeia
overstatement
oxymoron
parable
paradox
parody
pastoral
personification
point of view
protagonist
psychological realism
realism
rhythm
rite of passage
sarcasm
satire
simile
soliloquy
sonnet
style
symbol
syntax
theme
tone
tragedy
verbal irony
Term: Definition of the literary device selected
Example: Quotation, followed by source, including title, page/line number
Function:
Author’s purpose in employing this language resource at this point in
the work. How does this particular device enhance what the writer is
conveying? You may comment on theme, character, setting, or whatever
else is important in explaining how this device functions in this
particular instance.
Symbol: In the simplest
sense, a symbol is anything that stands for or represents something else
beyond it—often an idea conventionally associated with it. The term
symbolism refers to the use of symbols, or to a set of related symbols.
Example:
“Like him she was lefthanded or she played chess with her left hand . .
. He leaned forward and moved his bishop and mated her in four moves”
(All the Pretty Horses 133).
Function: This chess game between
John Grady and Alejandra’s godmother symbolizes the competition that
they are in for Alejandra herself. This game of chess, which takes
place between these two characters as John is trying to ascertain what
his chances are of his relationship with Alejandra receiving approval
from the family, represents the greater chess game between these two
competing characters. Although John Grady wins the first couple of
games and seems to be well on his way to achieving his goal, in the end
it is the godmother who triumphs. This directly mirrors John Grady’s
and the godmother’s lives: although John Grady wins Alejandra’s
affections initially, in the end he loses her. When he takes “her
queen” he is literally winning the chess match by taking the queen, but
he is also on a symbolic level attempting to take the godmother’s true
“queen,” Alejandra, who the godmother is determined to keep from
suffering the same misfortunes she endured. The lack of dialogue
between the characters during the match further reinforces the quiet
competition they are engaging in; one that is not violent but is indeed
fierce. The intellectual nature of he chess match also enhances the
choice that Alejandra ultimately makes near the end of the novel:
leaving John and opting instead for the security (and wealth) of her
family. This choice reflects the cool and calculating logic of a chess
match rather than the passion of the heart.
1) Read the poem more than once. A good poem will no more yield its
full meaning on a single reading than will a Beethoven symphony on a
single hearing.
2) Keep a dictionary by you and use it. It is futile
to try to understand poetry without troubling to learn the meaning of
the words in which it is composed. A few other reference books should
also be invaluable. Particularly desirable are a good book on mythology
and a Bible.
3) Read as to hear the sounds of the words in your
mind. Poetry is written to be heard: its meanings are conveyed through
sound as well as through print. Every word is therefore important.
4)
Always pay careful attention to what the poem is saying. One should
make the utmost effort to follow the thought consciously and to grasp
the full implications and suggestions. Because a poem says so much,
several readings may be necessary, but on the first reading you should
determine the subjects of the verbs and antecedents of the pronouns.
5)
Practice reading the poem aloud. A) Read it affectionately, but not
affectedly. B) Read it slowly enough that each word is clear and
distinct and that the meaning has time to sink in. C) Read the poem so
that the rhythmical pattern is felt but not exaggerated. Remember that
poetry is written in sentences, just like prose is, and that punctuation
is a signal as to how it should be read.
When writing a poetry explication make sure you start with a HOOK and a THESIS STATEMENT. Put here are a set of rules:
Poetry Explications
A
poetry explication is a relatively short analysis, which describes the
possible meanings and relationships of the words, images, and other
small units that make up a poem. Writing an explication is an effective
way for a reader to connect a poem's plot and conflicts with its
structural features. This handout reviews some of the important
techniques of approaching and writing a poetry explication, and includes
parts of two sample explications.
Preparing to write the explication
1. Read the poem silently, then read it aloud (if not in a testing situation). Repeat as necessary.
2. Consider the poem as a dramatic situation in which a speaker
addresses an audience or another character. In this way, begin your
analysis by identifying and describing the speaking voice or voices, the
conflicts or ideas, and the language used in the poem.
The large issues
Determine the basic design of the poem by considering the who, what, when, where, and why of the dramatic situation.
*
What is being dramatized? What conflicts or themes does the poem present, address, or question?
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Who is the speaker? Define and describe the speaker and
his/her voice. What does the speaker say? Who is the audience? Are other
characters involved?
*
What happens in the
poem? Consider the plot or basic design of the action. How are the
dramatized conflicts or themes introduced, sustained, resolved, etc.?
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When does the action occur? What is the date and/or time of day?
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Where is the speaker? Describe the physical location of the dramatic moment.
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Why does the speaker feel compelled to speak at this moment? What is his/her motivation?
The details
To analyze the design of the poem, we must focus on the poem's
parts, namely how the poem dramatizes conflicts or ideas in language. By
concentrating on the parts, we develop our understanding of the poem's
structure, and we gather support and evidence for our interpretations.
Some of the details we should consider include the following:
*
Form: Does the poem represent a particular form (sonnet,
sestina, etc.)? Does the poem present any unique variations from the
traditional structure of that form?
*
Rhetoric: How does the speaker make particular statements? Does the
rhetoric seem odd in any way? Why? Consider the predicates and what they
reveal about the speaker.
*
Syntax:
Consider the subjects, verbs, and objects of each statement and what
these elements reveal about the speaker. Do any statements have
convoluted or vague syntax?
*
Vocabulary:
Why does the poet choose one word over another in each line? Do any of
the words have multiple or archaic meanings that add other meanings to
the line? Use the Oxford English Dictionary as a resource.
The patterns
As you analyze the design line by line, look for certain patterns to
develop which provide insight into the dramatic situation, the
speaker's state of mind, or the poet's use of details. Some of the most
common patterns include the following:
*
Rhetorical Patterns: Look for statements that follow the same format.
*
Rhyme: Consider the significance of the end words joined by
sound; in a poem with no rhymes, consider the importance of the end
words.
*
Patterns of Sound: Alliteration and assonance create sound effects and often cluster significant words.
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Visual Patterns: How does the poem look on the page?
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Rhythm and Meter: Consider how rhythm and meter influence our perception of the speaker and his/her language.
Basic terms for talking about meter
Meter
(from the Greek metron, meaning measure) refers principally to the
recurrence of regular beats in a poetic line. In this way, meter
pertains to the structure of the poem as it is written.
The most
common form of meter in English verse since the 14th century is
accentual-syllabic meter, in which the basic unit is the foot. A foot is
a combination of two or three stressed and/or unstressed syllables. The
following are the four most common metrical feet in English poetry:
(1)
IAMBIC (the noun is "iamb"): an unstressed syllable followed by a
stressed syllable, a pattern which comes closest to approximating the
natural rhythm of speech. Note line 23 from Shelley's "Stanzas Written
in Dejection, Near Naples":
And walked with inward glory crowned
(2)
TROCHAIC (the noun is "trochee"): a stressed followed by an unstressed
syllable, as in the first line of Blake's "Introduction" to Songs of
Innocence:
Piping down the valleys wild
(3) ANAPESTIC (the
noun is "anapest"): two unstressed syllables followed by a stressed
syllable, as in the opening to Byron's "The Destruction of Sennacherib":
The Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold
(4) DACTYLIC (the noun is "dactyl"): a stressed syllable followed by two unstressed syllables, as in Thomas Hardy's "The Voice":
Woman much missed, how you call to me, call to me
Meter also refers to the number of feet in a line:
Monometer
Dimeter
Trimeter
Tetrameter
Pentameter
Hexameter
one
two
three
four
five
six