“Fire and Ice” by Robert Frost

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Presentation transcript:

“Fire and Ice” by Robert Frost Analyzing Author’s Use of Symbolism to Create Meaning

What comes to mind when you see this picture? See Think Flowers, green grass, blue sky spring Spring: allergies, pollen, baseball, DST, bees Birth, renewal, hope, rejuvenation

What comes to mind when you see this picture? See Think Palm tree, clear ocean water, sand, blue sky summer Summer: vacation, music, sunburn, summer school, baseball LEISURE, TIME, ADVENTURE, ENJOYMENT, EXPLORATION, LIFE

What comes to mind when you see this picture? See Think ORANGE, RED, YELLOW LEAVES fall Fall: pumpkin spice, Halloween, football, baseball, school RETURN TO ORDER, PREPARATION, SLOW DOWN, DECLINE

What comes to mind when you see this picture? See Think Snow, gray, red berries Winter WINTER: snow, Christmas, winter vacation, family, cold WINTER : desolation, isolation, hardship, endurance

What comes to mind when you see this picture? Warmth Destruction Light Consume

What comes to mind when you see this picture? Cold Barren Frozen Unfeeling

Symbolism Symbolism is taking something that represents itself AND something else Authors use symbolism to create meaning They do this by making connections between the objects, the audience’s understanding, and the point they’re trying to make with the text.

Close Reading: “Fire and Ice” Review “key ideas and details” and “craft and structure” questions. Complete “working from the text” questions. Write a thesis for a style analysis.

Close Reading: “Fire and Ice” Review “key ideas and details” & “craft and structure” questions. What is the central idea of the poem? Which details convey the central idea? What human emotions does the author associate with the elements of fire and ice? What impact do these associations have on the poem’s tone? In line 3, the author says “I’ve tasted of desire.” Is this statement literal or figurative? Why?

Close Reading: “Fire and Ice” Complete “working from the text” questions. Read the poem again silently. Pay close attention to the punctuation marks that signal ends of sentences. With a partner, take turns reading the poem aloud to each other. Read the poem so that you only stop at the end of each sentence, not each line. As your partner reads the poem to you, circle the words associated with the two major images. Using the words and phrases that you circled, discuss and analyze the purpose of the imagery and symbols in the poem.

Close Reading: “Fire and Ice” Write a thesis for a style analysis. Prompt: Explain how the author, Robert Frost, uses imagery and symbolism to convey meaning and purpose in his writing. Thesis frame: In (title of text), (author) conveys that (main idea). He does this by using the symbolism of (symbols) to create (effect on audience).

Close Reading: “Fire and Ice” Write a thesis for a style analysis. Prompt: Explain how the author, Robert Frost, uses imagery and symbolism to convey meaning and purpose in his writing. Thesis frame: In “Fire and Ice,” Robert Frost conveys that the world could end with either title element. He does this by using the symbolism of overwhelming fire and unfeeling ice to create a description of the equally destructive nature of the contrasting elements.