an introduction to poetry learning to read poetry well and to savor its pleasures involves learning...

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An Introduction to Poetry

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Slide 2 An Introduction to Poetry Learning to read poetry well and to savor its pleasures involves learning to ask questions about how we experience poems, how we interpret them, and how we evaluate them. Such questions include the following: 1. What feelings does the poem evoke? What sensations, associations and memories does it give rise to? 2. What idea does the poem express, either directly or indirectly? 3. What view of the world does the poet present? What do you think of the poets view? Slide 3 Interpreting Poetry When we interpret a poem, we concern ourselves less with how it affects us than with what it means or suggests Interpretation relies on our intellectual comprehension and rational understanding rather than on our emotional apprehension and response. Slide 4 Consider Read the first stanza of Robert Frosts Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening. Based on your prior knowledge and experiences reflect on what thoughts and questions come to mind. Whose woods these are I think I know. His house is in the village though; He will not see me stopping here To watch his woods fill up with snow. Slide 5 What ideas or questions came to mind? Whose woods these are I think I know. His house is in the village though; He will not see me stopping here To watch his woods fill up with snow. Frosts poem opens with a speaker who seems concerned momentarily about who owns the woods. The speaker seems reassured that the owner cant see him. One might wonder why the speaker should be concerned and why he bothers to mention it. Does he feel he is doing something wrong? The poem also paints a picture of a man, of woods, and of snow. It raises the questions: Why does he stop? What attracts him? Slide 6 Elements of Poetry: Tone When we read a poem we hear the speakers voice. Its the voice that conveys the poems tone. Tone is the authors implied attitude towards its subject. Tone is an abstraction we make from the details of a poems language: the use of meter and rhyme, the inclusion or exclusion of certain details; particular choices of words or sentence pattern, of imagery or figurative language. Slide 7 Elements of Poetry: Tone An authors tone is describe by adjectives. For example you might say The author of this novel sounds cynical, depressed, cheerful, sympathetic, outraged, positive, angry, sarcastic, ironic, solemn, vindictive, intense or excited. Slide 8 Tone is not an action, its an attitude. Slide 9 Slide 10 Slide 11 Slide 12 Slide 13 Slide 14 Some examples of authors tone Slide 15 This authors serious tone inspires an atmosphere of tragedy. This leads to a mood of sadness, sympathy, and caring in the reader when reading this passage. Slide 16 Poets often bare their souls in their poems. This poets grieving tone reveals her deepest feelings about her father and his death, creating an atmosphere of sadness and longing. This inspires a mood of sympathy and caring in the readers. Slide 17 This authors sarcastic tone inspires a slightly humorous atmosphere in spite of tragedy. This puts the reader in a cynical mood. Slide 18 Slide 19 Elements of Poetry: Diction Like all good writers, poets are keenly aware of diction, their choice of words In reading a poem it is necessary to know what the words mean, but it is equally important to understand what the words imply or suggest. Denotation is the literal, dictionary meaning of a word. Connotation is the associations and implications that go beyond a words literal meaning. Slide 20 Elements of Poetry: Diction For example, with the word BIRD Denotation: A feathered animal with wings Connotation: Fragility, vulnerability, sky, freedom. What about if we used the name of a specific bird? Its denotation would remain essentially the same but how would its connotation change? Hawk Dove Slide 21 Elements of Poetry: Diction Other forms of diction include: Informal diction (personal writing) Ex. I am going to tell Kathy Im sorry that I forgot to ask her to come to my birthday party. VS. Formal diction (academic or literary writing) Ex. I will inform Kathy that I apologize for forgetting to request her presence at my birthday party. Slide 22 Elements of Poetry: Diction Colloquial words conversational language such as: Hey, hiya, watcha, gonna, ya, yall, wanna, doin Slang words or phrases that are not considered standard in a speakers language but are acceptable in certain social settings. Slide 23 Elements of Poetry: Diction Jargon the special language of a profession or group. Cacophonous words harsh sounding words Ex. maggot, detest, disgusted, moan, slime Euphonious words - pleasant sounding words Ex. butterfly, puppy, luxurious, shimmer, trickle Slide 24 Elements of Poetry: Syntax Meanings in poems are also conveyed through an authors arrangement of words into phrases, clauses and sentences in order to achieve a particular effect. The ordering of words into meaningful verbal patterns is called syntax. In Emily Dickinsons A Narrow Fellow in the Grass, the speaker says about a snake His notice sudden is. By placing the verb is unexpectedly at the end of the line, Dickinson creates the sense of surprise we feel when we suddenly come upon a snake. Slide 25 Elements of Poetry: Syntax Lets go back to Frosts poem Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening. He begins this poem with Whose woods these are I think I know. In normal word order one would write: I think I know whose woods these are. Why do you think Frost changed the syntax of this line? To make the emphasis fall on whose woods, which are more important than what the speaker thinks he knows as he looks at them. Changes the tone as this inverted syntax provides the line with a more even rhythm and slows it down slightly. Slide 26 Elements of Poetry: Rhyme, Alliteration, Assonance & Consonance Rhyme is the matching of final vowel or consonant sounds in two or more words. When corresponding sounds occur at the end of lines we have end rhyme; when they occur within lines we have internal rhyme. Edgar Allen Poes The Raven illustrates both: Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered weak and weary, Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore --- While I nodded nearly napping, suddenly their came a tapping, As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door. Tis some visitor, I muttered, tapping at my chamber door ---- Only this and nothing more. Slide 27 Elements of Poetry: Rhyme, Alliteration, Assonance & Consonance Alliteration is the repetition of consonant sounds, especially at the beginning of words. Ex. Ah what a delicious day! Assonance is the repetition of vowel sounds in successive or close words. Ex. A city that is set on a hill cannot be hid. Consonance is the repetition of consonant sounds but not at the beginning of words. Ex. Sweet silent thought Slide 28 Elements of Poetry: Rhyme, Alliteration, Assonance & Consonance Going back to Edgar Allen Poes The Raven, what evidence do you see of alliteration, assonance or consonance? Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered weak and weary, Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore --- While I nodded nearly napping, suddenly their came a tapping, As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door. Tis some visitor, I muttered, tapping at my chamber door --- Only this and nothing more. Slide 29 Elements of Poetry: Rhyme, Alliteration, Assonance & Consonance Why would a poet use rhyme, alliteration, assonance and consonance in their writing? To affect the pace at which the reader reads the poem which in turn may effect its tone and mood. To emphasize particular words or phrases. To create a structure and focus for their poem. Slide 30 Elements of Poetry: Imagery Poets take in the world and give us impressions of what they experience through images. Imagery is language that addresses the senses (sight, smell, taste, touch and sound). Imagery is not only used to create a mental picture for the reader but to also help convey tone, mood and theme. Slide 31 Elements of Poetry: Imagery Consider the first stanza of Li Hos poem A Beautiful Girl Combs Her Hair Awake at dawn shes dreaming by cool silk curtains What images do these lines convey? How does this affect the tone and mood of the poem? Slide 32 Elements of Poetry: Figures of Speech A simile makes an explicit comparison between two things using the words like or as. For example, A sip of Mrs. Cooks coffee is like a punch in the stomach. This simile suggests that Mrs. Cooks coffee is very potent. Mrs. Cooks coffee is as strong as the cafeterias coffee is not a simile because the comparison is literal. Mrs. Cooks coffee is compared to something like it, another kind of coffee. Slide 33 Elements of Poetry: Figures of Speech A metaphor, like a simile, makes a comparison between two unlike things, but it does so implicitly, without the words like or as. Mrs. Cooks coffee is a punch in the stomach. Or, as Macbeth tells us, Life is a brief candle. Slide 34 Practice: Is it a simile or metaphor? She is as cute as a kitten. I am as busy as a bee. Sea of grief It broke my heart when my dog died. Life is like a box of chocolates, you never know what youre going to get. Slide 35 Other Figures of Speech Pun A play on words that relies on a word having more than one meaning or sounding like another word. Ex. Vacuuming sucks; Corduroy pillows are making headlines. Synecdoche A figure of speech in which part of something is used to represent the whole. Ex. A person in prison is behind bars; Germany invaded Poland. Metonymy When something closely associated a subject is substituted for it. Ex. Lend me your ears; That was a delicious dish. Slide 36 Other Figures of Speech Personification The attribution of human characteristics to nonhuman things. Ex. The trees screamed in the raging wind; The mice conspired in the cupboard. Apostrophe An address to either someone who is absent or dead and therefore cannot hear the speaker or to something nonhuman that cannot comprehend. Ex. O Life Slide 37 Other Figures of Speech Paradox A statement that initially appears to be self- contradictory but that, on closer inspection, turns out to make sense. Ex. The pen is mightier than the sword Oxymoron A condensed form of a paradox in which two contradictory words are used together. Ex. Cold fire; jumbo shrimp Slide 38 Other Figures of Speech Understatement - deliberately expressing an idea as less important than it actually is either for ironic emphasis or for politeness and tact Ex. "The grave's a fine and private place, But none, I think, do there embrace. Hyperbole A figure of speech, exaggeration in order to add emphasis without intending to be literally true. Ex. Teenagers eat everything in the house. Slide 39 Practice: Is it a pun, synecdoche, metonymy, personification, apostrophe, paradox, oxymoron, understatement or hyperbole? The temperature rose to 55 degrees today. It was a little warm. Lend me a hand. Youre clearly confused. I just bought a new set of wheels. The stars danced playfully in the moonlit sky. Slide 40 Any questions?