Spensers Faerie Queene LQ: Can I analyse Canto 1 of Spensers Faerie Queene, and his presentation of courtly love – comparing it to Chaucers presentation.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Miss L. Hamilton Extend your Bishop Justus 6 th Form Year 12: AS Level English ‘Struggle for Identity in Modern Literature’ Lesson Two Year.
Advertisements

Elizabethan Poetry. Poetic Genres Pastoral: songs, dialogues, funeral elegies, romances (John Milton, ‘Lycidas’) Satires Lyric poems: hymns, odes, epithalamiums.
CHINUA ACHEBE’S THINGS FALL APART LQ: Do I understand how successful students approach Section 1 of the exam? CHINUA ACHEBE’S THINGS FALL APART LQ: Do.
Byron – Don Juan LQ: Can I analyse how Byron presents lust and illicit love in Canto 1 of Don Juan? Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial,
Reading a poem academically 1. Look at the poem’s title 2. Use writing to think 3. Read the poem straight through 4. Look for patterns. 5. Identify the.
POETRY Poetry is all about 5 things…  Expression  Observation  Ideas  Emotions  Words and Opinions.
Sonnets. Poetic Terms & Definitions Metaphor A direct comparison between two things. Examples: Life is a dream Love is a vale of tears. Life is a hard.
Miss L. Hamilton Extend your Bishop Justus 2013/2014 Year 11 English Literature Controlled Assessment Retake Lesson 1 LQ: Am I able to explore.
Coleridge – Christabel LQ: How is homosexual love presented in Coleridge’s Christabel? Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial, illicit, adulterous,
Terms to Know. Poetry is self expression… The craft of poetry can include: Metaphor: a direct comparison of two different things “Shall I compare thee.
Spenser’s Sonnets – Lesson 6 LQ: Can I understand the Spenserian Sonnet structure and use my understanding to analyse the presentation of love in two Sonnets.
Miss L. Hamilton Extend your Bishop Justus 6 th Form Year 12: AS Level English ‘Struggle for Identity in Modern Literature’ Lesson Six Year.
Sonnet Notes Takes notes over pages , , and in your text book.
Sonnet Types Renaissance Poetry.
Miss L. Hamilton Extend your Bishop Justus 6 th Form Year 12: AS Level English ‘Struggle for Identity in Modern Literature’ Lesson 25 Year 12:
Review for Poetry Test! What do Narrative poems have that other poems don’t have?
Welcome...equipment out...ready to learn...Welcome...equipment out...ready to learn... Extended Essay Othello Lesson 10 LQ: Can I explore Shakespeare’s.
AS – Learning to Plan for the last question Learning Question: Can I plan effectively to answer the last question in the exam? Learning Path: Ball and.
Working towards the exam – Baroness Warsi Speech LQ: Can I create a Band 4+ response to an unseen text? ? Working towards the exam – Baroness Warsi Speech.
Working towards the exam LQ: Can I write effectively to articulate and impressive response to an unseen text? Working towards the exam LQ: Can I write.
The Renaissance Poetry Petrarchan Conceits A fanciful comparison of two apparently very different things. Love may be compared to a baited.
Keats – To Fanny and La Belle Dame Sans Merci LQ: Can I analyse and articulate how Keats presents unrequited love in To Fanny, La Belle Dame Sans Merci?
Types of Poetry BY: SAMANTHA ROLLINS. Acrostic A poem that is written around a word, usually the topic of the poem, such that the first letter of each.
CHINUA ACHEBE’S THINGS FALL APART LQ: Can I analyse how Achebe presents women through his language choice, structure and form? CHINUA ACHEBE’S THINGS FALL.
Miss L. Hamilton Extend your Bishop Justus 6 th Form Year 12: AS Level English ‘Struggle for Identity in Modern Literature’ Lesson One Year.
Ben Jonson – On my first Sonne LQ: Can I analyse a poem focused on a different type of love and still draw comparisons? Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited,
Sonnet (little song). Sonnet Subjects: Usually about love, sonnets often are written about beauty but also about the effects of time and mortality. Poets.
POETIC DEVICES. Alliteration: the repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words ("nodded nearly napping) Allusion: a reference to a well known.
Ms. Macejko. Song Lyrics Wordle project Explanation of how this wordle shows the significance of the lyrics (larger words for more meaningful words)
The Sonnet English IV. Sonnet A fourteen-line poem, usually written in iambic pentameter A fourteen-line poem, usually written in iambic pentameter Two.
Welcome...equipment out...ready to learn...Welcome...equipment out...ready to learn... Extended Essay Othello Lesson 15 LQ: How does Shakespeare present.
Welcome...equipment out...ready to learn...Welcome...equipment out...ready to learn... Extended Essay Othello Lesson 11 LQ: Can I explore an interpretation.
POETRY UNIT STUDY ISLAND SKILLS
Poetry Terms Types of Poetry.
Miss L. Hamilton Extend your Bishop Justus 6 th Form Year 12: AS Level English ‘Struggle for Identity in Modern Literature’ Lesson 26 Year 12:
Form and Structure. Metrical foot iamb (^ /) trochee (/ ^) anapest (^ ^ /) dactyl (/ ^ ^ ) spondee (/ /)
Working towards the exam LQ: Can I apply our new exam strategies effectively? Working towards the exam LQ: Can I apply our new exam strategies effectively?
3/31: Copy the following terms on your note cards 15.Speaker: the voice that talks to the reader in a poem (may or may not be the author of the poem) 16.Haiku:
Poetry. Stanza A repeated grouping of two or more lines in a poem that often share a pattern of rhythm or rhyme.
Working towards the exam LQ: Can I apply our new exam strategies effectively? Working towards the exam LQ: Can I apply our new exam strategies effectively?
Sonnets. What is a Sonnet? A sonnet is a 14 line lyric poem, usually written in iambic pentameter, that has a set rhyme scheme. A sonnet is a 14 line.
Sonnets 30 and 75 / The Faerie Queene
Sonnets. Poetic Terms & Definitions Metaphor A direct comparison between two things. Examples: Life is a dream Love is a vale of tears. Life is a hard.
Thomas Hardy – Lesson 14 LQ: Can I analyse a poem for meaning and understand it’s relevance within the canon? Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly,
AP English Lit and Comp Poetry Terms 2 SONNETS. Lyric Poems LYRIC POETRY- originally meant poems that were meant to be sung to the accompaniment of a.
Christina Rossetti – Lesson 12 LQ: Can I understand the relevance of a female voice? Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial Social Context:
William Blake – Lesson 12 LQ: Can I analyse political allegory and develop my understanding of Blake’s poetry? Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly,
Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial, illicit, adulterous, lustful LIT TERMS: pentameter, alliteration, sexual language, Byronic rhyme,
Including contextual elements in analysis
Year 11 ~ Macbeth/Poetry 26b
Clashes and Collisions Introduction to poetry module
Video casts available here: LQ: Can I analyse a poem effectively?
LQ: Can I analyse the use of animal imagery in Macbeth?
POETRY READING ASSIGNMENTS Period 7
What is a Sonnet? Understanding the forms, meter, rhyme, and other aspects of the sonnet.
Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial
Structure in Poetry.
Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial
Types of Poetry.
Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial
Poetry Literary form that combines the precise meanings of words with their emotional associations, sounds, & rhythms.
Poetry Terms.
Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial
Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial, illicit, adulterous, lustful LIT TERMS: pentameter, alliteration, sexual language, Byronic rhyme,
Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial
Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial
Literary Terms: caesura(e), rhyming couplet, repetition, alliteration, sibilance, simile, metaphor, personification, voice, personal pronoun, feminism,
Poetry Break-down and Types of Poetry
Sonnets AP English Lit. & Comp..
Mrs. Taylor English 10 Pre-thinking and literary terms
Presentation transcript:

Spensers Faerie Queene LQ: Can I analyse Canto 1 of Spensers Faerie Queene, and his presentation of courtly love – comparing it to Chaucers presentation in the Millers Tale Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial Social Context: Renaissance, ballad, Tudors, Puritans, Humanism LIT TERMS: pentameter, free verse, alliteration, sexual language, Spenserian sonnet, rhyme scheme, couplet

LESSON 4: LQ: Can I understand the Spenserian Sonnet structure and use my understanding to analyse the presentation of love in two Sonnets by Spenser? Excellent progress: well-chosen quotations, literary devices analysed, effect on reader discussed, alternative interpretations considered and social context mentioned Outstanding progress: well-chosen quotations, sophisticated language used, literary devices analysed, effect on reader argued with perceptive points made, alternative interpretations revealed, developed consideration of social and historical context Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial Social Context: Renaissance, ballad, Tudors, Puritans, Humanism LIT TERMS: pentameter, free verse, alliteration, sexual language, Spenserian sonnet, rhyme scheme, couplet

What do we know about the 1500s? Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial Social Context: Renaissance, ballad, Tudors, Puritans, Humanism LIT TERMS: pentameter, free verse, alliteration, sexual language, Spenserian sonnet, rhyme scheme, couplet

The Spenserian stanza is a fixed verse form invented by Edmund Spenser for his epic poem The Faerie Queene. Each stanza contains nine lines in total: eight lines in iambic pentameter followed by a single Alexandrine line in iambic hexameter. The rhyme scheme is ababbcbcc. Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial Social Context: Renaissance, ballad, Tudors, Puritans, Humanism LIT TERMS: pentameter, free verse, alliteration, sexual language, Spenserian sonnet, rhyme scheme, couplet

Read through the extract of the Faerie Queene. Which type of love do we see? Excellent progress: well- chosen quotations, literary devices analysed, effect on reader discussed, alternative interpretations considered and social context mentioned Outstanding progress: well- chosen quotations, sophisticated language used, literary devices analysed, effect on reader argued with perceptive points made, alternative interpretations revealed, developed consideration of social and historical context Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial Social Context: Renaissance, ballad, Tudors, Puritans, Humanism LIT TERMS: pentameter, free verse, alliteration, sexual language, Spenserian sonnet, rhyme scheme, couplet

In pairs, annotate the text, focussing on the language and how courtly love is presented – try to compare to Chaucers presentation (or parody of courtly love) EXT: does the FORM affect the reader/listener Excellent progress: well- chosen quotations, literary devices analysed, effect on reader discussed, alternative interpretations considered and social context mentioned Outstanding progress: well- chosen quotations, sophisticated language used, literary devices analysed, effect on reader argued with perceptive points made, alternative interpretations revealed, developed consideration of social and historical context Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial Social Context: Renaissance, ballad, Tudors, Puritans, Humanism LIT TERMS: pentameter, free verse, alliteration, sexual language, Spenserian sonnet, rhyme scheme, couplet

Now, focus on the comparison. In fours: Plan an essay answering the question: How do Chaucer and Spenser present courtly love in The Millers Tale and The Faerie Queen? Excellent progress: well- chosen quotations, literary devices analysed, effect on reader discussed, alternative interpretations considered and social context mentioned Outstanding progress: well- chosen quotations, sophisticated language used, literary devices analysed, effect on reader argued with perceptive points made, alternative interpretations revealed, developed consideration of social and historical context Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial Social Context: Renaissance, ballad, Tudors, Puritans, Humanism LIT TERMS: pentameter, free verse, alliteration, sexual language, Spenserian sonnet, rhyme scheme, couplet

Model Planning Excellent progress: well- chosen quotations, literary devices analysed, effect on reader discussed, alternative interpretations considered and social context mentioned Outstanding progress: well- chosen quotations, sophisticated language used, literary devices analysed, effect on reader argued with perceptive points made, alternative interpretations revealed, developed consideration of social and historical context Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial Social Context: Renaissance, ballad, Tudors, Puritans, Humanism LIT TERMS: pentameter, free verse, alliteration, sexual language, Spenserian sonnet, rhyme scheme, couplet

Feedback to class Listen and prepare to: EXTEND/ARGUE/QUESTI ON Excellent progress: well- chosen quotations, literary devices analysed, effect on reader discussed, alternative interpretations considered and social context mentioned Outstanding progress: well- chosen quotations, sophisticated language used, literary devices analysed, effect on reader argued with perceptive points made, alternative interpretations revealed, developed consideration of social and historical context Love: platonic, courtly, unrequited, godly, familial Social Context: Renaissance, ballad, Tudors, Puritans, Humanism LIT TERMS: pentameter, free verse, alliteration, sexual language, Spenserian sonnet, rhyme scheme, couplet