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Culler -- Chapter 5 Rhetoric, Poetics, and Poetry.

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1 Culler -- Chapter 5 Rhetoric, Poetics, and Poetry

2 Rhetoric/Poetics n The definitions have shifted about through time, right, but basically, n Rhetoric is the art of persuasion, the language and thought that is used to construct discourse. n Poetics the attempt to account for literary effects by looking at writing and reading conventions.

3 Rhetoric/Poetics n Poetry is, of course, rhetorical language in that it works to persuade. n Plato thought poetry was frivolous and distracting and banned it from his republic. It persuaded people to slack off. n Aristotle found it useful because it allowed people to release their pent up emotions. It persuaded people to live vicariously, instead of looking for trouble.

4 Rhetorical Figures: They’re what make something literary n All language, really, is figurative. We’ve just forgotten what the original substitutions were. “Grasping” a “hard problem.” n Metaphor -- treats something as something else. Links by similarity. n Metonymy -- moves from one thing to another. Links by contiguity. n Synecdoche -- substitutes part for whole. n Irony -- juxtaposes appearance and reality.

5 Genres who speaks? n Poetic or Lyric = narrator speaks in 1st person n Epic or Narrative = narrator speaks in his own voice, but allows characters to speak in theirs. n Drama = characters do all the talking

6 Or, Genres Relation of speaker to audience n Drama = author concealed from audience n Lyric = poet turns back on listeners, and pretends to talk to himself or to someone else. n Prose = author addresses audience throughout.

7 Poetry as word and act n Poem as structure made up of words –How does sound produce sense? n Poem as event (an act of the poet, an experience of the reader) –relation between poet and narrator –how do we determine this? –why is this discussion of “voice” important?

8 Poetry as utterance overheard n When we read poetry or hear it read, we imagine or reconstruct a speaker and a context –identify a tone –infer a posture –infer a situation –infer concerns and attitudes of speaker –We ask, what might lead someone to speak this way?

9 The extravagance of lyric n What about poems that address the wind or a tiger or some other usually not addressed object? –O wild west wind... –Tiger, tiger burning bright... n Aspiration to the sublime -- something beyond the human. It invokes prophetic, inspirational, mystical power of word spinner, the mystical, the magical

10 Poems doodle and riddle us. n And it’s this playing with us, by us, that is important in reading poetry. n Don’t treat a poem like you would a conversation -- assume it has a structure of its own. n Read it as if it were an aesthetic whole n All parts should fit together harmoniously.

11 So, let’s practice. n P. 684 -- My Last Duchess n Dramatic situation. Who is speaking? What’s going on? What’s he saying? Do trust him? Like him? What’s his problem with his last Duchess? n How does the structure add to sense? n Which words do you notice? How do they affect the sense you make? n Any figurative language? How does it work? n What’s the theme, do you think?

12 Wild Nights--Wild Nights n P. 708 n Who’s the speaker? What’s the situation? What’s the tone? Where do you imagine her to be? Where is her lover? n Language: Rhythm? Diction? Figurative language? n Theme?

13 Leda and the Swan n P. 718 n What’s the situation? Who is speaking? To whom? Why? n Form and structure? n Language? n Theme?


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