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Poetry Introduction 1: Identity & Family

This introduction to poetry explores themes of identity and family through tone, sound, and free verse. Explore different styles and analyze famous poems.

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Poetry Introduction 1: Identity & Family

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  1. Poetry Introduction 1: Identity & Family Tone, Sound and Free Verse Intro to Lit Image source

  2. Housekeeping (1) –Costumes, Props & Subtitles • Renting -- get receipts dated by the end of Nov (11/30) to give them to me by next Thurs (12/3) • Reimbursement-- the ones that pay will get reimbursed on the spot—if the expense total falls within the budget limit and comes with the school’s tax ID (35701598). • Prop Request Forms: send to David yourself • Subtitles? Recommended, better consistent (all the groups the same)-answers given to Kate with the next group reports

  3. Housekeeping (2) Attendance and Group Reports • A, C, F – missing the 4th reports (meaning everyone is absent?) • One person “missing” in E (their 5th report)? • Actors/Actresses--No absence allowed (or can be made up for) for group rehearsals from now on. • Comments & Subtitle sample ppt added to our folder. group leaders— 4 more weekly reports (due 11/23, 11/30, 12/7, 12/14); altogether 7 (important for attendance records)

  4. Housekeeping (3) Dress Rehearsals & Play Schedule 12/10 8:30-12:30. DressRehearsal (1) --breakfast served at 8:20 – 8:40 12/16 1:30-3:30.Rehearsal (2) 12/17 8:00-12:30..The Miny Play Contest –lunch order today Don’t be late!!!

  5. 12/10 (Thurs) • Attendance taken twice: at 8:30 and at 12:00 • Working all the 3 hours: Except for the instruction time, the director/group leaders should find work for each person. • Each group with Hegel, perform for about 15 mins, get instructions another 15 mins.

  6. 12/16 1:30 -3:30 • Attendance taken once: 30 mins before your performance time • Before and after the prep & rehearsal times, the groups can leave and find places to do rehearsal yourselves.

  7. Poetry Unit Assignment • Due 12-07: One Poem: Annotations+one paragraph analysis of its theme (a. Note 作筆記; b. Download and Upload to 作業區) • Due 2016-01-04: Annotation of another poem & Comparison of two poems

  8. Outline • I. What is poetry? A. Its basic Components. B. Its Functions: What is poetry good for? • II. Poetry I: Identity • III. A Moment of Life Condensed • E “Stopping By Woods”D “Those Winter Sundays” • II. Our Emotions Expressed • F “I’m Nobody…” C “We Real Cool” • IV. Our interest in music and rhythm. • Next Week: “This is Just to Say” “The Word Plum” • V. How do we read a poem? • VI. Sound and Sense, Meter and Rhyme

  9. Poetry: Definitions meter Denotation  connotation 1) literature in metrical form (wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn ); 2) Poetry is life distilled. ~Gwendolyn BrooksPoetry is thoughts that breathe, and words that burn. ~Thomas Gray Traditional poetry is language arranged in lines, with a regular rhythm and often a definite rhyme scheme. Nontraditional poetry [free verse] does away with regular rhythm and rhyme, although is usually is set up in lines. The richness of its suggestions, the sounds of its words, and the strong feelings evoked by its line are often said to be what distinguish poetry from other forms of literature.(source) Sound, shape & sense

  10. Poetic Elements Poetry Fiction Plot Structure … Narrator Language • wk 1 Speaker and Voice • wk 2-3 Sense: imagery and figures of speech (意象與比喻語言) denotation (意義) and connotation (含意) • wk 4 Sound: rhythm (節奏), meter(詩律), rhyme(韻). • (this & next S) Shape: line arrangement & poetic form

  11. From The Dead Poet society (1) (2) WHAT WILL YOUR VERSE BE? What good amid these, O me, O life? Answer. That you are here—that life exists and identity, That the powerful play goes on, and you may contribute a verse.

  12. What is poetry good for? Our Themes: Identity & Daily Life, Love & NatureDeath and Society, Art and Modern Society It explores and deepens meanings of life • -- to expand our vision, • -- to beautify and enrich our lives. Its imagery and sounds • -- paint life and compose music with words, Its language • -- renews and pushes beyond the limits of human language. (Ref) It sharpens our ears (for listening), trains our pronunciation, expands our knowledge of language (syntax, words) and activates our imagination. As a start, let’s talk about how it (1)presents a moment in life, (2) expresses our emotions and (3) satisfies our need to sing and feel the rhythm of life. Poetic Elements

  13. Poetry is Life Story Condensed Self Expression Musical

  14. Understanding Poetry From Paraphrasing, Analysis to Application

  15. Poetry I: Lyric and Tone; Identity and Daily Life [Reading and Paraphrase; theme & meanings] Every group – short performance [Group A: W. Carlos Williams “This is just to say” (p. 797); Group B: Chasin, Helen “The Word Plum” (p. 828)] Group C: Brooks, Gwendolyn “We Real Cool” (p 720)Group D: Hayden, Robert “Those Winter Sundays” (p 783) Group E: Frost, Robert “Stopping by Woods…” (p1091)Group F: Dickinson, Emily “I’m Nobody! Who Are You?”*

  16. Poetry (1): Tone, Identity and Daily Life • Life Story • Frost, Robert “Stopping by Woods…” (p1091) • Hayden, Robert “Those Winter Sundays” (p 783) • Self-Expression • Dickinson, Emily “I’m Nobody! Who Are You?” • Brooks, Gwendolyn “We Real Cool” (p 720) • Music • W. Carlos Williams “This is just to say” (p. 797); • Chasin, Helen “The Word Plum” (p. 828; ref. 830)

  17. General Questions What is ‘identity’? What determines our identities?

  18. General Questions What is ‘identity’? What determines our identities? Self Black

  19. Unit 1: General Questions • Which of the factors of identity (society, family, your interest, gender) concerns you the most? • Are parents always loving? What makes their love difficult to express, or 'difficult' for their children to understand? • Can you see poetry out of daily life?

  20. (1) Poetry offers Vignettes of Life

  21. Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening symbol rhyme a a b a b b c b c c d c d d d d Whose woods these are I think I know.His house is in the village, though; He will not see me stopping hereTo watch his woods fill up with snow.My little horse must think it queerTo stop without a farmhouse nearBetween the woods and frozen lakeThe darkest evening of the year.He gives his harness bells a shakeTo ask if there is some mistake.The only other sound's the sweepOf easy wind and downy flake.The woods are lovely, dark, and deep,But I have promises to keep,And miles to go before I sleep,And miles to go before I sleep. personification Whose woods these are I think I know.His house is in the village, though; He will not see me stopping hereTo watch his woods fill up with snow.My little horse must think it queerTo stop without a farmhouse nearBetween the woods and frozen lakeThe darkest evening of the year.He gives his harness bells a shakeTo ask if there is some mistake.The only other sound's the sweepOf easy wind and downy flake.The woods are lovely, dark, and deep,But I have promises to keep,And miles to go before I sleep,And miles to go before I sleep. Open vowels and explosives Tone?

  22. Discussion Questions • “I”: Who is the speaker? How would you characterize him and his tone? Why do you think he has decided to stop to look at the woods? • “The horse”: What thoughts and feelings does the speaker attribute to his horse? • Speaker vs. the woods: What do you think the speaker means by the line “But I have promises to keep”? Why does he use the conjunction “but” here? What promises might he be thinking about?

  23. An Unfulfilled Desire for Nature, Magic, Rest (and Death?) Pay attention to its sound effects, use of personification, images and symbols

  24. Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening: Sound and Sense • Form: 4 rhymed quatrains; meter: iambic pentameter; repetition of the last two lines • Sound: long vowels, mellifluous sound (/m/, /n/ or /v/) vs. explosives (aspirated explosive /t/ & /p/; see the poem) • Tone (expression of attitude and feelings towards the subject)? • calm, meditative, tired, resigned to fate

  25. Frost’s New England Mentality (ref) • Frost'sexpression of the New England mentality toward woods dark, deep and snow-filled has at its roots a place where all are snug in farmhouses or cozy village homes; a place where all travel in security with the safety of a favorite, contented horse pulling reliable sleighs. This mentality views wintery woods as friendly, peaceful places. It is not a mentality that casts--under normal circumstances--woods as dangerous, malevolent places. New Englanders enjoy watching the dark, deep woods that surround them quietly, almost magically, fill with snow, watching almost mesmerized as the snow creeps higher and higher up the tree bark or fence post. • For a New Englander, like Robert Frost was from 1885 on (37 years by 1922), winter snow is like a warm comforter descending on the land and on one's soul for a long, peaceful slumber after a year of hard work and toil. Falling snow filling a dark wood at the evening of the day is a quieting sight that lights the eyes with a gentle glow and warms the heart with thoughts of a later flower-strewn spring coming at the end of winter quietude and slumber. The feeling produced is dreaminess, and critic George Montiero, Professor Emeritus of Brown University, uses the word "dreamy" to describe the poetic tone of the poem. He speaks of the poet's "dreamy mind and that mind's preoccupations..." (George Montiero, Robert Frost and the New England Renaissance). (source)

  26. Robert Frost (1874–1963) Norton

  27. "Those Winter Sundays" (1962) alliteration, explosive sounds Sundays too my father got up early and put his clothes on in the blueblackcold, then with cracked hands that ached from labor in the weekday weather made banked fires blaze. No one ever thanked him. I'd wake and hear the cold splintering, breaking. When the rooms were warm, he'd call, and slowly I would rise and dress, fearing the chronic angers of that house. Speaking indifferently to him, who had driven out the cold and polished my good shoes as well, What did I know, what did I know of love's austere and lonely offices? [rituals, ceremonious] 1) Cold + color; Cold + firewood 2) House personified Open vowels; Long and short lines

  28. Questions for Discussion • Why does the poem begin “Sundays too” (rather than “On Sundays”)? • What does the use of alliteration, as in “clothes,” “cold,” “cracked” (lines 2–3) and “blueblack,” “banked,” “blaze” (lines 2, 5), contribute to the poem? • What is the significance of the speaker's reference to his fear of “the chronic angers of that house” (line 9)? • What are the “austere and lonely offices” of love in the poem (line 14)? • What does the poem suggest about how the speaker felt about his father as a child? As an adult?

  29. Clues to the Last Question 1) Contrast between the last two lines and the rest of the poem. What did I know, what did I know of love's austere and lonely offices? 2) Do you have similar experience with your parents, where their love and care don’t get appreciated?

  30. "Those Winter Sundays" -- • Paraphrasing • Analysis (1) Connotation: the contrast between the past view and the present one about the speaker’s father and his work. • Analysis (2) Poetic Language: descriptions of the cold and the house. Sound pattern. • Analysis (3) Does it matter to you whether you know of the poet’s background? Is the poem relevant to you?

  31. Robert Hayden(1913–1980) Norton

  32. (2) Poetry expresses our emotions  Poetry can be understood in its context, but also related to ours.

  33. "We Real Cool" (1960  p. 685)  The Pool Players.Seven at the Golden Shovel. We real cool. We Left school. We Lurk late. We Strike straight. We Sing sin. We Thingin. We Jazz June. We Die soon. alliteration internal rhymes repetitions Strike straight: 1) attacking others; 2) play billiard balls Jazz: 1) empty talk to or sex with a woman named June; 2) going here and there in June ?

  34. "We Real Cool" • Paraphrasing • Analysis (1) Connotation: Speakers’ identity? Why “cool”? • Analysis (2) Poetic Language: Their tone? How do the stress and sound Pattern help convey the meaning? Symbol-- Golden Shovel? • Analysis (3) What is “cool” for you? Does developing a group identity matter for you?

  35. I'm Nobody! Who are you? I'm Nobody! Who are you? Are you--Nobody--too? Then there's a pair of us! Don't tell! they'd banish us—you know! How dreary--to be--Somebody! How public--like a Frog-- To tell your name--the livelong June-- To an admiring Bog! repetitions alliteration Iambic meter

  36. I'm Nobody! Who are you? • Paraphrasing • Analysis (1) Connotation: Speakers’ identity? That of “you”? The differences between nobody and somebody? • Analysis (2) Poetic Language: The speaker’s tone in the 1st and 2nd stanzas? The use of dashes? The metaphor of bog and frog. • Analysis (3) Do you like to be a somebody, or nobody? Or neither? What do you feel about the speaker’s criticism of “somebody” like a frog?

  37. Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) • A reclusive poet with mental energies. • produced 1,775 known poems as well as the hundreds of letters. Only 7 (or 11) of the poems were published anonymously in her lifetime. • a traumatic experience (between 1858 and 1862) • Stayed in her own house for the last seventeen years of her life. Film: Emily Dickinson: The Poet In Her Bedroom; voices and vision 15:15 (physical world as inspiration); 29:30 (death)

  38. (3) Poetry satisfies our need to sing and feel the rhythm of life.

  39. One example: 李白【將進酒】 君不見黃河之水天上來,奔流到海不復回? 平仄仄平平平仄平仄平,平平仄仄仄平平 君不見高堂明鏡悲白髮,朝如青絲暮成雪? 平仄仄平平平仄平仄仄,平平平平仄平仄(source) 人生得意須盡歡,莫使金樽空對月。 天生我才必有用,千金散盡還復來。 烹羊宰牛且為樂,會須一飲三百杯。 岑夫子,丹丘生,將進酒﹐杯莫停。 平平仄、平平平:平仄仄,平仄平。 與君歌一曲,請君為我傾耳聽。[……] Line & Rhythm—樂府詩長短句 repetition with variation) Stressed + unstressed = meter (later)

  40. This is Just to Say you were probably saving for breakfast Forgive me they were delicious so sweet and so cold. Is this art? And how? This Is Just To Say I have eaten the plums that were in the icebox and which William Carlos Williams (1883-1963)

  41. The Word Plum  The word plum is deliciouspout and push, luxury ofself-love, and savoring murmurfull in the mouth and fallinglike fruittaut skinpierced, bitten, provoked intojuice, and tart fleshquestionand reply, lip and tongueof pleasure. Eating Plum Poetry? “P-lu-m”

  42. The Word Plum  Analysis (1) – The poem describes the uttering of the word plum (pout, push, rolling of tongue, closing of lips) and compares it to the eating of a plum, and to ? Analysis (2) – It also allows us to imagine how the fruit is savored. Analysis (3) – a. Which word do you like the most—its sound, or shape or meanings? b. Can reading poetry “feel” like eating a plum?

  43. Poetry and Popular Songs The two are interrelated, so -- if you like songs, you should like poetry; -- if you know how to analyze poetry, you must know how to do that to songs (its music excluded). Poetry and painting and other arts …

  44. How do we read and re-read a poem? • Read and Paraphrase: Read a poem silently once to try to catch its general meaning and mark new words too.  After you checked all the new words, read the whole poem again and check and see if you can paraphrase it. Remember that poetic syntax may be different from that of our daily language.  [In other words, you sometimes need to move around different parts of a sentence to understand its meaning and “paraphrase” it.] 2. denotation  connotation: Read the poem the third time and mark expressions that impress you. Try to figure out the poem's deeper meanings.  Part to Whole Pattern: For some poems with intricate image pattern or dense symbolic meanings, you need to stop and dwell on some parts of the poem and their interconnections. 

  45. How do we read and re-read a poem? 3. sound  senseRead the poem out loud to feel its sound effects. Sounds – explosive or mellifluous sounds, long or short vowels, nasal sounds, aspirated (p) and unaspirated (b) * The meanings of a (good) poem can not be exhausted. Re-reading a poem (out loud or silently) and taking note of your responses is always good. The more times you read, the more you will get from a poem. Intro to Lit

  46. Understanding Poetic Language: Ref. Sound and Sense

  47. Sound & Sense Different sounds create different effects in different contexts. In general easily pronounced consonants (e.g. [l], [r], [m], [n]) and open and long vowels can be create a sense of ease or fluidity Explosive sounds ([t], [d], [g], [k],[p] [b]), sometimes combined with short vowels,  can create a sense of vitality or difficulty. nasal sounds ([m] & [n]) can create a sense of melancholy etc.

  48. Rhyme & Rhythm • Rhyme is a sound device that usually entails the repetition of the final vowel and consonant sounds in two words. • internal rhyme: Some poems have rhymes within the lines. • Assonance is the repetition of vowels sounds, either at the beginning of words or within words. • Head rhyme: Alliteration is related to assonance in that alliteration also involves the repetition of sounds, this time the repetition of consonantsat the beginning or middle of words. • Meter (韻律 later): a regularly repeating rhythm, divided for convenience into feet (音步). Meter describes an underlying framework; actual poems rarely sustain the perfect regularity that the meter would imply. (e.g. iambic pentameter 抑揚五音步 reference)

  49. Lyric (抒情詩) • The most personal of poetic forms, lyric is usually a short but intense expression of personal feelings. • Although it is originally sung to the music of a lyre, not all lyrics are to be sung. Still, musical quality can be found in some of the poems we have read (e.g. “A Noiseless Patient Spider”). • Although it involves personal expressions, the speaker of a lyric is not necessarily the poet.

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