English III CHS C. Edge. literary gifts were evident from about age 9 moved to New York City from western Massachusetts editor, critic, and poet the first.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Poetry Analysis Using TPCASTT
Advertisements

TPCASTT (a way to Analyze Poetry)
Literary Terms in The Power of One and Pride and Prejudice
Bell Ringer accept / except a lot / alot all right / alright
Writing Workshop Analyzing Literature Assignment Prewriting Choose and Analyze a Poem State Your Thesis and Gather Support Practice and Apply Feature.
Lesson 8 Defining Moments
Selected Poetry of Norman MacCaig
By William Cullen Bryant
Welcome to AP English Literature
William Cullen Bryant American Poet or Santa Clause in Disguise? For wheresoe'er I looked, the while, Was Nature's everlasting smile. -
I Wandered Lonely As A Cloud By William Wordsworth
William Wordsworth. His Life William Wordsworth (7 April 1770 – 23 April 1850) was a major English Romantic poet who, with Samuel Taylor Coleridge,
Rhetoric and the Reader
Exercises for Romantic Literature
William Cullen Bryant.
2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt 2pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt Romantic Era Terms Romantic Era Terms.
, Also referred to as the “American Renaissance”
Triumph of Imagination over Reason
Imagination and the Individual
William Cullen Bryant ( )
A Movement Across the Arts
Poetry Analysis Using TPCASTT Mrs. Willoughby-Hull English 12 ERWC/AP English Lit August 22-23, 2013.
By William Cullen Bryant
HostedBy Mr. Dittmer Literary Movements Famous Authors Poetic Devices Back to Nature
The Romantic Period. Began with the William Wordsworth’s Lyrical Ballads in 1798 Began with the William Wordsworth’s Lyrical Ballads in 1798 Embraced.
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley Mary Shelley’s Background Born in Daughter of two intellectual radicals: Mother was Mary Wollstonecraft: early women’s.
William Cullen Bryant. Widely acknowledged as father of American poetry Outspoken advocate for women’s rights Wrote “Thanatopsis” as a teenager Fought.
This is a process to help you organize your analysis of poetry. We have already learned the vocabulary, now it’s time to put it into practice! Together,
Selection Focus Transparency 3-1 Selection 3 Contents Click a hyperlink to go to the corresponding content area. Before You Read Reading the Selection.
“Thanatopsis” Thantos (Greek)= Death Opsis (Greek)= Seeing
Colonial and Puritan Writers
1A1 English William Wordsworth ( ). William Wordsworth romantic An English romantic poet. He wrote Lyrical Ballads, a collection of poems, with.
Investigating Identity Unit. Unit Summary During this unit students will participate in different activities that are all a part of Project-Based Learning.
In notebooks answer this question: What can death teach us about life?
Literary Types Understanding Setting and Context.
Thanatopsis William Cullen Bryant.
BEFORE BELL Please take out your vocab books and a sheet of paper! Take out your outline, works cited page, and the grad paper timeline!
Romanticism. sprang up around the end of the 18 th century and flourished at the beginning of the 19th century Literary movement that reacted against.
Romanticism A Movement Across the Arts
Poetry.  This presentation is an overview of what you will be learning in choice this year. You may not understand everything in this lesson but we will.
Poetry Analysis Oct. 28, This is a process to help you organize your analysis of poetry. We have already learned the vocabulary, now it’s time to.
Instructions Take out your William Blake Packet and pick up the Wordsworth packet from the front table. Await further instructions.
Do Now: Answer in complete sentences.
Aim: How does the writing strategy of tone help develop the central idea of the poem “War is Kind” by Stephen Crane? Do Now: Answer in complete sentences.
Close Reading Analysis Questions
QUICKWRITE How does the thought of death make you feel? What comforts you when you think of your own death?
Poetry Analysis Essay. What does it mean to “analyze” a poem?  We are trying to figure out what the theme of the poem is… AND  How the poet uses literary.
American Romanticism Approximate years:
William Cullen Bryant Nov. 3, 1794-June 12, 1878 American Romanticism 10 th grade adv. English Shannon Luster.
The Peace of Wild Things Wendell Berry. When despair for the world grows in me and I wake in the night at the least sound in fear of what my life and.
Approaching Literature Groups 3 and 4. Overview Experience Your first impression Analysis Interpreting the text Extension Applying the piece to the outside.
How to Analyze Poetry…. Step 1 Read the poem & record any first reactions. What do you notice about the structure, what it says or anything else. Usually.
“Thanatopsis” Big Question: What can death teach us about life? Here's a picture of a kitten to lighten the mood:
American Romanticism Approximate years:
William Cullen Bryant
“Thanatopsis” By William Cullen Bryant
Lines composed a few miles above Tintern abbey.
Questions to guide you while annotating:
Thanatopsis & William Bryant
By William Cullen Bryant Pg. 277
BEFORE BELL Please take out your vocab books and a sheet of paper!
Optimism and Individualism
THANATOPSIS “Thanatos” = death / personifcation of death
WILLIAM cullen bryant ( )
By William Cullen Bryant
A Movement Across the Arts
American Literature Fall 2015
A Method for Poetry Analysis
Presentation transcript:

English III CHS C. Edge

literary gifts were evident from about age 9 moved to New York City from western Massachusetts editor, critic, and poet the first mature American Romantic. Inspirations: Lyrical Ballads (1798) by his great English contemporaries, William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge philosophy of deism, which held that divinity could be found in nature the wondrous beauty of the geography of his surroundings, which supported this philosophy

Where does an individual find inspiration?

Think of a time when you were inspired by something you read. With a small group of your classmates, discuss what you read and why it inspired you. In what specific way did this piece of literature influence your thoughts or actions?

central insight into human experience that a writer reveals in a literary work The poem reflects upon what happens to us after we die and how we should feel about death. Bryant’s answers to these questions represent the theme of this poem.

inversion—a reversal or rearranging of word order in sentences

Bryant uses imagery to evoke emotion.

blight (blyt) n.: anything that takes away hope or causes ruin. The thought of our own mortality is a blight on our happiness. clod (klahd) n.: lump of dirt or soil. The farmer broke up the clods of dirt to plant his crops for the upcoming year. plod (plahd) v.: walk slowly or with difficulty. All you can do is plod on when thoughts of death become overwhelming. mirth (murth) n.: happiness. It is difficult to keep a sense of mirth when one thinks about dying some day.

When Bryant was only sixteen years old, he coined the word thanatopsis by combining two Greek words, thanatos, “death,” and opsis, “sight.” The poem defines his new word and offers a different way of looking at and thinking about death.

Mother Nature speaks to the lover of nature. If he is happy, she amplifies that happiness. If he is sad, she attempts to heal that sadness. When he becomes depressed thinking about his impending death, he should go outside and observe nature and what it can teach. When you die, your body is reunited with the dust from which it came. Your body becomes food for other living organisms. Do not fear, you aren’t alone when you die. Think of all who have died before you—kings, wisemen, and the wealthy. Don’t fret about those left behind for they will soon join you as well. Live your life and don’t fear death. Approach it as if you were going to lay down and take a nap on your couch.

Notice how the speaker contrasts the “narrow house” in line 12 with the “open sky” in line 14. What feelings do these images evoke? How do these contrasting images work together to reflect the poem’s theme?

The main clause in this sentence, “shall exist / Thy image,” is inverted. Identify the subject and verb, and then rewrite the clause in normal English word order. Why do you think Bryant inverted this clause?

In lines 58–72, what comfort does the speaker offer? Do you find the images in these lines disturbing or comforting? Explain.

What claims does the speaker make about how we should live?

1. What Greek words were combined to make the title? How do the meanings of these words contribute to the meaning of the poem? Thanatos (death) Opsis (seeing) The title presents the poem as a way of seeing death.

2. Define the following words; consider the context of the poem: shroud, pall, narrow house, and sepulcher. How do these words and their meanings impact the meaning of the poem? All of these words are associated with death and burial. This furthers the idea of the poem presenting a way of looking at death.

3. Is this a poem about life or is this a poem about death? Explain your answer.

4. The tone of this poem shifts. What is the tone in the first part of the poem? When does the tone shift? What is the tone after the shift? The tone in the first part of the poem is forbidding, stern, final and then shifts to one of comfort.

5. Thanatopsis is an ELEGY. What is an elegy? What are the conventions of an elegy? What elements of Thanatopsis meet those conventions? An elegy must move from grief to comfort, must shift from melancholy and mournful to soothing and comforting. The poem says we will not be alone when we die, etc.

6. This poem was written early in the nineteenth century. The type of landscape art during this time period favored sweeping panoramas, wild vistas, untamed landscapes, and views of the sky. Look at Thanatopsis as a visual description of a painting. What elements of the poem are like a painting? What images are created in the poem? What landscape is created? Look at all of the descriptions of nature, etc.

7. Thanatopsis is a poem that can be interpreted in several ways. How is this poem an example of a historical piece? It represents part of the view of the time period. How is this a Romantic poem? The speaker hears the voice of nature, turns to nature for comfort. How is this a Calvinist poem? Look at the poem as religious counsel. Many elements of Calvinistic beliefs are present.