"how to not be afraid of poetry and learn how to understand words that you not know."
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EngelsMiddelbare schoolhavoLeerjaar 4
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Jabberwocky
or:
"how to not be afraid of poetry and learn how to understand words that you not know."
Slide 1 - Diapositive
Jabberwocky
after today's class you will be able:
to find ways to read, understand and (maybe even) enjoy poems in the future.
Slide 2 - Diapositive
Jabberwocky
In front of you, you have a copy of 'The Jabberwocky' by Lewis Caroll.
We'll go through it a few times and gradually get more and more acquainted with the poem.
Required tools: pen and paper.
Slide 3 - Diapositive
Jabberwocky
First reading:
Take handout 1 and scan the poem.
Are there words that puzzle you? Write them down.
Slide 4 - Diapositive
Jabberwocky
Second reading:
Take the second handout and read the poem.
You'll see that most of the words you wrote down have been omitted.
Try to think up meanings for the words you wrote down.
what helped you thinking up these meanings?
Slide 5 - Diapositive
Jabberwocky
Third reading:
Now that you thought up meanings to the words you didn't know, read the poem. And fill in the blanks with the words you came up with.
Do you understand what the poem is about?
Slide 6 - Diapositive
Jabberwocky
The author of the poem is Lewis Caroll. Besides a children's books writer, he also was a mathematician (wiskundige), an inventor, a photographer and a deacon (assistant to a priest or bishop).
He lived from 1832 to 1898. The Victorian era.
Work in pairs.
Can you find components that hold a connection to:
* Mathematics?
* Photography/visualisation?
* Inventing/creativity?
* Christianity?
Slide 7 - Diapositive
Jabberwocky
Here are some possible answers:
Mathematics: The rhyme scheme (abab), the rythm displayed by repetition (one two one two, through and through)
Photography: The use of graphical words to describe the jabberwock.
Inventor: The creation and use of nonsical words, gibberish.
Christianity: the ominous bad vs the good (my son)
Slide 8 - Diapositive
Jabberwocky
Fourth reading.
So you have read Jabberwocky three times.
The fourth time you are going to read it. You will do so while listening to the poem.
Discuss in small groups (max. 4).
Did you hear things that you didn't pick up from just reading?
Why did you pick them up now? And not before?
Slide 9 - Diapositive
Jabberwocky
fifth reading.
After reading the poem three times. Thinking about it, discussing it, learning about the context and even listening to it. You now get to watch a clip on the Jabberwock.
Ask yourself: did the clip clearify things that weren't clear yet?