1 / 7

‘Stealing’

‘Stealing’. Carol Ann Duffy. Poetry has layers - Literal verses Figurative language. Literal language – the most obvious reading/ meaning (giving an actual example ) E.g . He ran as fast as he could when confronted by the savage dog . ( Yes he did. He just ran )

lahela
Download Presentation

‘Stealing’

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ‘Stealing’ Carol Ann Duffy

  2. Poetry has layers - Literal verses Figurative language • Literal language – the most obvious reading/ meaning (giving an actual example) E.g. He ran as fast as he could when confronted by the savage dog. (Yes he did. He just ran) • Figurative language – alternative readings/ meanings that go beyond the obvious which are more abstract or metaphorical. (Presenting your meaning imaginatively) E.g. I'm so hungry I could eat a horse. (You wouldn't would you? It just means you could eat a large meal) Common examples of figurative language use are: • Simile Alliteration • Metaphor Idiom • Personification Hyperbole

  3. Literal/ figurative/ both? Why? ‘The most unusual thing I ever stole?’ ‘A snowman.’ ‘..a matewith mind as cold as a slice of icewithin my own brain.’ ‘..a fierce chillpiercing my gut.’ ‘Life’s tough.’ ‘Mirrors.’

  4. Identify which of the following features are present within the poem Stealing? Label them. AlliterationShort sentencesSingle line stanzas Questioning SimileMetaphorPersonificationEnjambmentSibilance Irony Synesthesia (combining two senses – e.g. hearing a sound, evokes a sensation of colour) Rhyme Internal rhyme Distinctive Rhythm/ metre RepetitionAssonanceCaesura ForegroundingObvious StructureFormInteresting use of language/ syntax/ Semantics

  5. Stealing The most unusual thing I ever stole? A snowman. Midnight. He looked magnificent; a tall, white mute beneath the winter moon. I wanted him, a mate with a mind as cold as the slice of ice within my own brain. I started with the head. Better off dead than giving in, not taking what you want. He weighed a ton; his torso, frozen stiff, hugged to my chest, a fierce chill piercing my gut. Part of the thrill was knowing that children would cry in the morning. Life's tough. Sometimes I steal things I don't need. I joy-ride cars to nowhere, break into houses just to have a look. I'm a mucky ghost, leave a mess, maybe pinch a camera. I watch my gloved hand twisting the doorknob. A stranger's bedroom. Mirrors. I sigh like this - Aah. It took some time. Reassembled in the yard, he didn't look the same. I took a run and booted him. Again. Again. My breath ripped out in rags. It seems daft now. Then I was standing alone among lumps of snow, sick of the world. Boredom. Mostly I'm so bored I could eat myself. One time, I stole a guitar and thought I might learn to play. I nicked a bust of Shakespeare once, flogged it, but the snowman was the strangest. You don't understand a word I'm saying, do you?

  6. Diamond 9 – rank the importance of lines and justify your thinking Which of these triangles represents a commentary structure? What? Why? How? Themes Suffering Empowerment Self-destruction Methods Enjambment to present the speaker’s inner voice Effective use of punctuation Representation of natural speech

  7. Review and reflection How can the poem Stealing be structurally likened to another Duffy poem? Compare how Duffy presents one crafting method in Stealing to how she uses this method in another of her poems. For example, Duffy uses enjambment in Stealing to convey the self destructive nature of the speaker’s inner voice. How does she use enjambment in another of her poems?

More Related