Showing posts with label definition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label definition. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Exercises & Assignment -- Week 14; Definition: "Refrain"

Read "The Lady of Shalott" by Alfred, Lord Tennyson.

Exercise 1:

Paraphrase each of the four sections of this poem.

Exercise 2:

This poem is considered a "ballad". Explain what is a ballad and why this poem is a ballad.

Exercise 3:

A refrain is a repetition of words, phrases or lines at regular intervals. When refrains follow a stanza they are called terminal refrains. When refrains are within stanzas they are called internal refrains. When a refrain changes a little with each repetition it is called an incremental refrain.

What is the refrain in the poem "The Lady of Shalott"? Where is it and what type(s) is it?

Exercise 4:

Listen to Loreena McKennitt's musical adaptation of "The Lady of Shalott". Which stanzas did McKennitt leave out and which stanzas did she use? Do you think that McKennit chose most appropriate stanzas or would you have included or excluded other stanzas?

Exercise 5:

Consider the "curse" of the Lady. What do you think was this curse? What triggered it to come into effect?

Exercise 6:

Identify the "liminal spaces" in this poem, and explain why you think they are liminal.

Exercise 7:

Discuss the similarities between the Lady's Castle and Plato's Cave.



Exercise 8:

It is possible that the Lady of Shallot is an allegorical figure. What do you think the Lady symbolizes? Keeping your answer in mind, what do you think the poem is about?

Monday, May 25, 2009

Forms

Poetry lines are often grouped together. Such a group of lines are often referred to as a "verse" or a "stanza". Sometimes stanzas have very specific attributes, such as a fixed number of lines and a fixed meter. When the poem's stanzas have specific recognizable attributes, they are called closed forms. Closed forms with very specific and fixed, like the Japanese Haiku, are called fixed forms. Poems with stanzas that have no clear form are called open forms.

  • Closed Forms

There are various examples of Closed Forms. Following are some of the closed forms that you may come across in this course: Blank verse, the couplet, the tercet, the quatrain, the, the Rhyme royal and the Sonnet.

Refer to the textbook (Norton's Anthology of Poetry, 3rd Edition) p. 1413-1415 for explanations of these forms.

  • Fixed Forms
A fixed form is a type of closed form which is very specific in its form, for instance the amount of lines, the combination of closed forms, the meter and even the rhyme may all be "fixed". Examples of fixed forms are the haiku, the Limerick (a single stanza with five lines with often the last word in the first and second line repeating). The fixed form that you will most encounter in this course is the Sonnet.

There are three types of sonnets: The Italian Sonnet (also known as a Petrachan Sonnet), the Shakespearean Sonnet (also known as an English Sonnet, or Elizabethan Sonnet), and lastly the Spenserian Sonnet. Refer to the textbook (Norton's Anthology of Poetry, 3rd Edition) p. 1415-1417 for explanations of these sonnets. Note how each sonnet is combined of a different combination of closed forms. For example the Shakespearean Sonnet contains three quatrains and ends with a rhyming couplet.

  • Open Forms

Open Form usually do not have a specific rhyme scheme or clearly identifiable meter. Althought the poet my use rhyme and meter in the poem, there doesn't seem to be a fixed pattern. Open form is sometimes also referred to as "Irregular form" or "Free Verse".

Refer to the textbook (Norton's Anthology of Poetry, 3rd Edition) p. 1419-1422 for a discussion on open forms.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Sound: Alliteration & Assonance

Alliteration and assonance refer to the repetition of similar sounds and is therefor a form of rhyme.

Alliteration
concern the recurrence of consonant sounds, for instance the [s] and [m] sounds in Keats's poem "To Autumn": "Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness, / Close bosom-friend of the maturing sun". Assonance refer to the recurrence of vowel sounds, for example the [i:] and [ou] sounds, from the same poem: "Thy hair soft-lifted by the winnowing wind; / Or on a half-reaped furrow sound asleep".

Alliteration and assonance focus the reader's attention on the words where it occurs. In modern poetry, therefore, poets usually keep alliteration and assonance for special occasions, so they can point out relationships between words or ideas or bring attention to something.

Monday, March 30, 2009

Definition: Synecdoche, Literal and Figurative Language

Synecdoche

Synecdoche is a figure of speech where a part stands for a whole, or the whole stands for a part; e. g. In the following line from a poem by Wordsworth "And then my heart with pleasure fills," heart stands for the whole person, i.e. the speaker is filled with joy, not only his heart.

Literal Language and Figurative Language

Literal language is the plain meaning of words; there isn't a deeper meaning to it. Compare with denotative.

Figurative language is language with a deeper, and often aesthetic, meaning. Compare with connotative. The use of figurative language is called figures of speech. Some examples of figures of speech you have learned already are personification, synecdoche and simile.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Definition: Imagery, Symbolism (including Simile and Metaphor), Apostrophe, Personification


Imagery


Imagery refers to anything in the poem that you can imagine. The most common form of imagery in poetry is (1) Visual Imagery. Images related to sound is called (2) Auditory Imagery; those related to touch is called (3) Tactile Imagery; referring to smells, (4) Olfactory Imagery; and imagery to do with taste is (5) Gustatory Imagery. Imagery concerning movement, i.e. (6) Kinesthetic Imagery, is sometimes also identified.

When you notice imagery, ask yourself: What is the purpose of the imagery? Is it merely to describe something, or does it reveal a mood or attitude? Do the imagery act symbolically?

Symbolism

A symbol is something that stands for, or represents, something else. For example, the flag below stands for, or symbolizes, the Republic of Korea.

Often, symbolism is "undefined". In other words, the symbol could refer to more than one thing.

There are two other ways in which something can stand for something else. They are called simile and metaphor.

If I say the sun is like an orange, then an orange becomes a symbol for the sun. They are similar in color and in form (spherical). When I use terms such as "like", "as", "than", "resembles", we call it simile.

"The sun is like an orange", is an example of a simile. When I omit such words of reference, and merely say X = Y, it is a metaphor. For example, "The sun is an orange" is a metaphor.

Simile and metaphor are usually considered "defined". We are certain what it represents.

Apostrophe

Apostrophe is a way of speaking to someone or something which one do not ordinarily speak to. For example, if I speak to my chair, or speak to Elvis Presley, it is called apostrophe.

Personification

When a thing, animal or something abstract (e.g. Truth), is made human, it is called personification. In "To the Evening Star", William Blake refers to "every flower that shuts its sweet eyes". Flowers do not have eyes -- this is an example of personification.

Types of Poetry: Three Forms

There are three types or forms of poetry; i.e. Lyrical Poetry, Epic Poetry and Dramatic Poetry.

Lyrical Poetry

"Lyric", derives from the word "lyre" which is a type of stringed instrument. It therefore refers to music. Lyrical Poetry used to be sung. They tend to be relatively short and often convey the feelings and thoughts of a single speaker.

William Wordsworth's poem, "Daffodils", is an example of a Lyrical Poem. In the YouTube-video below, a rapper performs an adapted version of Wordsworth's "Daffodils".



Epic / Narrative Poetry

An epic is a type of story. Epic Poetry, also known as Narrative Poetry, are basically "storrytelling poems". They tend to be long, often several hundred lines and are often divided into several sections.

Lord Alfred Tynnyson's "The Lady of Shallot" is an example of an Narrative Poem. In the YouTube-video below, Loreena McKennit performs this poem in a Celtic style.



Dramatic Poetry

Dramatic Poetry is poetry that includes drama, i.e. it is theatrical. This means that it can be performed like a play. Sometimes there are many "characters" that are in dialogue. If only one "character" is speaking, it is called a monologue.

Edgar Allen Poe's "The Raven" is an example of Dramatic Poetry. In the YouTube-video, Vincent Price recites "The Raven". Note the dramatized style.

Definition: Poetry

For the exam you need to be able to give a good definition of "poetry" / "poem".

You can build your definition off of the one below from TheFreeDictionary.Com:

Poem: A verbal composition designed to convey experiences, ideas, or emotions in a vivid and imaginative way, characterized by the use of language chosen for its sound and suggestive power and by the use of literary techniques such as meter, metaphor, and rhyme.