Warm-Up: Brainstorm Review

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Presentation transcript:

Warm-Up: Brainstorm Review You have FIVE MINUTES to list everything you can remember about the following terms: Symbols/Symbolism Imagery Figurative Language Theme Tone Mood Poetry

SIFT Method Symbol: examine the text and title for symbolism Images: identify images and sensory details Figures of Speech: analyze figurative language and other devices Tone and Theme: discuss how all devices reveal tone and theme

Symbols: Signs of Something More Our everyday lives are heaped with symbols: These commonly accepted symbols are called public symbols

Symbols in Literature Writers create new, personal symbols in their work. In literature, a symbol is an object, a setting, an event, an animal, or even a person that functions in the story the way you’d expect it to, but also stands for something more than itself, usually for something abstract.

Is it a symbol? Guidelines to follow… Symbols are often visual. When some event or object or setting is used as a symbol in the story, you will usually find that the writer has given it a great deal of emphasis. Often it reappears throughout the story. A symbol in literature is a form of figurative language. Like a metaphor, a symbol is something that is identified with something else that is very different from it, but that shares some quality. A symbol usually has something to do with a story’s theme.

(SIFT) Images Identify images and sensory details. Imagery helps to promote mood and tone. What do I see, hear, taste, smell or feel? What effect is the author trying to convey with these images? Writers use language to create sensory impressions and to create specific responses to characters, events, object, or situations in their works. The writer “shows” rather than “tells”

(SIFT) Figures of Speech Analyze figurative language and other devices. Writers form images by using figures of speech such as simile, metaphors, hyperbole, and personification. Other devices can include: irony, allusion

Simile A direct comparison of two things, usually using the words like or as. “He watches from his mountain walls, And like a thunderbolt he falls.” Tennyson “Hell is a city much like London/ A populous and smokey city.” Shelley My heart is like an apple tree whose boughs are bent with thickest fruit.” Christina Raced

Metaphor An IMPLIED comparison in which one thing is spoken in terms of something else. Metaphors are extremely valuable in making an abstract idea clearer by associating the idea with something concrete that relates to one or more of the senses. “And merry larks are ploughman’s clocks.” Shakespeare “Entangled in the cobweb of the schools.” Cowper “Time let me hail and climb Golden in the heydays of his eyes.” Thomas

Hyperbole The use of exaggeration or overstatement to make a point. It may be used for emphasis, for humor, or for poetic intensity. “Here once the embattled farmers stood, And fired the shot heard around the world.” Emerson It is used freely in sports broadcasting and news articles… “…slaughtered their opponents on the basket ball court.”

Personification A comparison that treats objects or things as if they were capable of the actions and feelings of people. “…Sea that bears her bosom to the moon” Wordsworth “The dirty nurse, Experience.” Tennyson “Mad Ireland hurt you into poetry.” Auden

Irony An expression in which the author’s meaning is quite different (often the opposite) from what is literally said. Irony, as a matter of tone, occurs most frequently in prose as a technique for comedy, tragedy, suspense or horror. Three types of irony: Verbal Situational Dramatic

(SIFT) Theme and Tone Theme: central, underlying, and controlling idea of a literary work. Abstract concept represented by a character, by actions, or by images in the literary work. “The Message”

Theme= What it is NOT Cannot be expressed in a single word. Not the purpose of the work (entertainment or instruction) Man versus nature is not a theme, it is a conflict. Unlike a moral or fable, the theme is seldom, if ever, stated. It is never a cliché.

How Do I Figure Out the Theme? You must first understand the plot, the characterization and conflict, the imagery, and the author’s tone. Identify the subject in one word… Then, explain in one or two sentences what the author says about the subject. NOTE: Many stories/novels have more than one theme and there is seldom just one “right” answer!

Tone & Mood Tone: The AUTHOR’S attitude, feelings, or emotions towards a subject. angry-challenging-sarcastic-outraged-humorous Mood: The emotions that the READER feels while reading; the atmosphere of the story. Mood is conveyed through character emotions, setting and other elements. romantic-gloomy-optimistic-sad-hopeful

More on tone… To misinterpret tone is to misinterpret meaning (THEME) If you miss irony or sarcasm, for example, you may misread the meaning of an entire passage!

Shift in Tone Good authors rarely use only one tone! A speaker’s attitude may be complex… An author might have one attitude toward the audience and another attitude toward the subject.

How to analyze tone: Diction: the connotation of word choice S How to analyze tone: D I L S Diction: the connotation of word choice Images: Imagery that appeals to the senses Details: Facts and details that the author has included (does not appeal to the senses) Language: Formal? Cliché? Jargon? Figurative Language? Sentence Structure: Long or short sentences?

SIFT Poetry Analysis Reading 1: Just read Reading 2: Read and annotate – look for imagery, figurative language, key words, and anything else that seems important Reading 3: Complete the SIFT