2) Understanding of literary devices (metaphor/symbolism/setting/irony/hyperbole/imagery)
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Middelbare school
This lesson contains 18 slides, with text slides.
Items in this lesson
Today's objectives
1) Understanding & analysis of
This Poem - Elma Mitchell
Funeral Blues - W.H. Auden
2) Understanding of literary devices (metaphor/symbolism/setting/irony/hyperbole/imagery)
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Literary Devices
Last time:
"A Good Poem" - Robert McGough
Literary devices:
Alliteration
Onomatopoeia
Personification
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This Poem - Elma Mitchell
We'll discuss the following literary devices in the poem:
a) metaphor
b) extended metaphor
c) irony
d) repetition
First: What do think this poem means?
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Metaphor
A literary device/figure of speech that makes an implicit (implied/hidden) comparison between two things that are unrelated, but which share some common characteristics.
COMMON METAPHORS
My brother is the black sheep of the family -> he is neither a sheep nor is he black BUT a black sheep stands out from a herd of sheep/could be separate from the herd and not included.
My sister was boiling mad -> she's not actually boiling, but her reaction is quite heated/at its peak/"burns" people
She's a breath of fresh air -> she's not really fresh air, but she is a refreshing change that does good/inspires
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Extended metaphor
An “extended metaphor” is an implicit comparison between two unrelated things that continues throughout sentences in a paragraph, a complete paragraph, or lines in a poem.
Q 1) "This Poem" (Elma Mitchell) contains an extended metaphor. The poet makes an implicit comparison between a poem and what? Why does he do this?
Q 2) Can you mention some of the lines that are part of this metaphor?
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Irony
1) Situational irony: when the opposite happens of what you expected
2) Verbal irony: when the narrator means the opposite of what he says
Q. Can you find an example of verbal irony in "This Poem" by Elma Mitchell?
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Repetition
Q. 1) Why does the narrator repete the words starting with "un-"? What kind of feeling does this give you?
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Other literary devices
Q. Can you find any other literary devices in the poem?
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Funeral Blues - W.H. Auden
Well-known poem
Elegy
poem in the form of elegiac couplets,
written in honor of someone deceased.
4 stanzas (=group of lines formin a unit in a poem), 4 lines per stanza,
fixed rhyme scheme AABB
We'll discuss the following literary devices in the poem:
a) setting
b) symbolism
c) imagery
d) hyperbole
e) assonance
Slide 9 - Slide
Setting
Time and place where the action of the poem happens
What is the setting of "Funeral Blues"?
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Symbolism
An object representing another, to give an entirely different meaning that is
much deeper/ more significant.
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Symbolism in Funeral Blues
Q 1) What does it mean to "Stop the Clock", "Cut off the phone", "Silence the piano" ?
Q 2) What do "black cotton gloves" symbolize?
Q 3) "He was my North, my South, my East and West" - what do these words symbolize?
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Imagery
The use of particular words that create a visual representation of ideas in our minds (symbols, metaphors, simile)
Q: What comes to mind when you hear the words "blues", "moaning", and "muffled drum"?
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Hyperbole
A hyperbole is an unreal exaggeration to emphasize a real situation.
Common hyperboles (every-day use):
She's so heavy, she weighs a ton!
I'm dying of shame!
What a dumb action: you must have a pea-sized brain!
It took him ages to solve the problem
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Hyperbole in Funeral Blues
A hyperbole is an unreal exaggeration to emphasize a real situation.
Q 1) What are examples of hyperboles in the poem "Funeral Blues"?
Q 2) Can you find a stanza (= unified group of lines in a poem) with only hyperboles?
Q 3) What kind of feeling does exaggeration create? Which grammatical form does the narrator use in the first two stanzas to help create this kind of feeling?
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Assonance
The repetition of a vowel sound or diphthong in non-rhyming words
Q. Can you find an example of a vowel sound that is repeated in the stanzas of "Funeral Blues"?
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Other literary devices
Q. Can you find any other literary devices in the poem?
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Discuss
Discuss in groups:
Which one of the three poems is most cleverly written?