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P OETRY A NALYSIS. Select the poem carefully In a poem analysis, you will generally be given a selection of two or three poems Pick one to analyze Pick.

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Presentation on theme: "P OETRY A NALYSIS. Select the poem carefully In a poem analysis, you will generally be given a selection of two or three poems Pick one to analyze Pick."— Presentation transcript:

1 P OETRY A NALYSIS

2 Select the poem carefully In a poem analysis, you will generally be given a selection of two or three poems Pick one to analyze Pick one you like or feel you could analyze Don’t always pick a short poem – they tend to be more difficult Longer poems tend to be more like narratives (stories)

3 Research the poet There will be research already performed on the poet you’ve selected. Read about the poet’s life, history, and style Often the poet’s personal life is a direct impact on his or her work. Research the poem It is possible that someone has written about the poem you will analyze. Research and read about the poem. Other literary criticism can aid you in your analysis. NEVER copy, plagiarize, or ignore the original poem. You must come up with a new thought and analysis. Simply copying someone else’s ideas will not be sufficient.

4 Title Ponder the title before reading the poem, predict what the poem is "about."

5 List words and Phrases List the important Nouns, Verbs, Phrases, and Clauses

6 Paraphrase Translate the poem into your own words. Focus on one syntactical unit at a time, not necessarily on one line at a time. Or write a sentence or two for each stanza of the poem.

7 Connotation Contemplate the poem for meaning beyond the literal. What do the words mean beyond the obvious? What are the implications, hints, or suggestions of these particular word choices?

8 Devices Examine any and all poetic devices, focusing on how such devices contribute to the meaning, the effect, or both, of a poem. (What is important is not that you can identify poetic devices so much as that you can explain how the devices enhance meaning and effect.) Especially note anything that is repeated, either individual words or complete phrases. Anything said more than once may be crucial to interpretation.

9 Attitude Observe both the speaker's and the poet's attitude (tone). Diction, images, and details suggest the speaker's attitude and contribute to understanding.

10 Shifts As is true of most of us, the poet's understanding of an experience is a gradual realization, and the poem is a reflection of that epiphany. Trace the changing feelings of the speaker from the beginning to end, paying particular attention to the conclusion. To discover shifts, watch for the following: key words: but, yet, however, although; punctuation: dashes, periods, colons, ellipsis; stanza and/or line divisions: change in line or stanza length or both; irony: sometimes irony hides shifts; effect of structure on meaning, how the poem is "built"; changes in sound that may indicate changes in meaning; changes in diction: slang to formal language, positive connotation to negative

11 Theme Determine what the poet is saying. In identifying theme, recognize the human experience, motivation, or condition suggested by the poem.


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