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Poetry Exploration 2014 Understanding Poetry

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Page 1: Poetry Exploration 2014 Understanding Poetry. “Introduction to Poetry”- by Billy Collins to+Poetry.pdf

Poetry Exploration 2014

Understanding Poetry

Page 2: Poetry Exploration 2014 Understanding Poetry. “Introduction to Poetry”- by Billy Collins to+Poetry.pdf

“Introduction to Poetry”- by Billy Collins

• http://shslboyd.pbworks.com/f/Introduction+to+Poetry.pdf

• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lf69NbUlZXk

• 1. Read the poem by Billy Collins.

• Core Analysis Frame Poetry D36-D43 (handout)

• 2. Application of Concepts- demonstrate your understanding of the Core Analysis Frame: Poetry (put it to work).

Now, let’s look at another way to break down and analyze poetry…

Page 3: Poetry Exploration 2014 Understanding Poetry. “Introduction to Poetry”- by Billy Collins to+Poetry.pdf

POETRY ANALYSIS- TP-CASTT

• http://shorewiki.wikispaces.com/file/view/TP-CASTT.pdf

Page 4: Poetry Exploration 2014 Understanding Poetry. “Introduction to Poetry”- by Billy Collins to+Poetry.pdf

The Craft of Poetry- Imagery

• Not only do poets play with the meanings of words, they play with the sounds of words, taking advantage of the fact that hearing something expressed can be as pleasant as thinking about it.

• Two basic elements that begin to distinguish a poem’s craft:

1. The way it uses WORDS to create literal and figurative IMAGES

2. The way it produces SOUND, creatively arranging words in LINES &

STANZAS.

Page 5: Poetry Exploration 2014 Understanding Poetry. “Introduction to Poetry”- by Billy Collins to+Poetry.pdf

WORDS & IMAGES

• “What I like to do is treat words as a craftsman does his wood or stone to carve, mold, polish, and plane them into patterns, sequences, sculptures…” – Dylan Thomas

• A poet is using words more CONSCIOUSLY than any other kind of writer.

• Poets exploit the power of words to evoke thoughts, feelings, and reflections in ways that are sometimes very direct, sometimes very indirect.

• Most finished poems are very deliberate products because each word was selected carefully for one of many reasons.

• Poetry works its magic by the way it uses words to evoke “images” that convey a lot of meaning once you look into them.

Page 6: Poetry Exploration 2014 Understanding Poetry. “Introduction to Poetry”- by Billy Collins to+Poetry.pdf

IMAGERY

• An image in poetry refers to the words or the language a writer uses to convey a concreate mental impression, which may be visual, creating a “picture” in the reader’s imagination, or sensory in other ways.

• A literal image is a mental impression created by direct description.

• Literal images= a writer’s use of concrete, specific, sensory words to directly describe something, someone, some feeling, some vision, or some experience.

Page 7: Poetry Exploration 2014 Understanding Poetry. “Introduction to Poetry”- by Billy Collins to+Poetry.pdf

IMAGERY

• Figurative images= a mental impression created by indirect description, or what is known as “figures of speech.”

• Figurative images= can be understood as those that describe something by comparing it to something else- metaphor, simile, and personification (examples).

Page 8: Poetry Exploration 2014 Understanding Poetry. “Introduction to Poetry”- by Billy Collins to+Poetry.pdf

IMAGERY

• When poets are direct, they employ:1. repetition

2. a kind of shorthand, familiar to diction to draw us in

3. (forces involvement by using) extremely concrete & specific

4. vivid & direct use of language

Extra Credit Opportunity- Locate and read (outside of class) “With No Immediate Cause” and identify the above techniques designed to force readers to pay attention to a controversial, but extremely relevant topic (Ntozake Shange).

Page 9: Poetry Exploration 2014 Understanding Poetry. “Introduction to Poetry”- by Billy Collins to+Poetry.pdf

IMAGERY

• When poets are direct, they employ:1. repetition

2. a kind of shorthand, familiar to diction to draw us in

3. (forces involvement by using) extremely concrete & specific

4. vivid & direct use of language

Now, let’s give it a try… “Those Winter Sundays” (Guided Practice)

Page 10: Poetry Exploration 2014 Understanding Poetry. “Introduction to Poetry”- by Billy Collins to+Poetry.pdf

“Those Winter Sundays”

• “Those Winter Sundays”

• Sundays too my father got up earlyand put his clothes on in the blueblack cold,then with his cracked hands that achedfrom labor in the weekday weather madebanked fires blaze. No one ever thanked him.I'd wake and hear the cold splintering, breaking,When the rooms were warm, he'd calland slowly I would rise and dress,fearing the chronic angers of that house,Speaking indifferently to himwho had driven out the coldand polished my good shoes as well.What did I know, what did I knowof love's austere and lonely offices?