ISLC 8

Description

Culture & Literature Flashcards on ISLC 8, created by Lisza Neumeier on 25/11/2016.
Lisza Neumeier
Flashcards by Lisza Neumeier, updated more than 1 year ago
Lisza Neumeier
Created by Lisza Neumeier over 7 years ago
4
3

Resource summary

Question Answer
Poetry focus? -focus on language and form -musicality, rhythm and rhyme (eg. song lyrics!!) -performance aspect (can be performed) -Image, thought, idea, experience, emotions -Empathy (lyrical I of the poem often wants you to side with him/her in an emotionally) more liberal language use (reduced syntax, half sentences, ..) -relatively short (some are not, but most are short) -poetic language is not restricted (we know it from song lyrics, ads, slogans, …) does not have to be difficult
Emily Dickinson: A word is dead
The language of poetry What's Prosody Prosody: study of rhythmic and acoustic elements that contribute to a total sound effect In linguistics: used a bit differently In C&L studies: language of poetry is not a totally diviant language (not like we have normale English and poetry has poetic English)
assonance? consonance? ??
Repetition New look, new formula, new fragrance, all new reduced syntax repetition
Versification: rhythm, metre and rhyme What? What do they create? -suprasegmental sound patterns -all those are things that create the musicality effect of poetry -
10 syllables pentametre
unstressed - stressed syllable iamb
Imagery: figurative and metaphorical language use eg. You are a treasure (German) carrying meaning of something else! eg. treasure: a lot of value to characterization of another humans’ value -often we don’t think about it a lot and we understand it as conventionalized (it’s normal) -less conventionalized: eg. with my students are sponges (conventionalized) vs. my students are vacuum cleaners
nonsense poetry rule it should always rhyme sound effect are not so dominant; mostly the words are; but in ,,the hunting of a snark'': Dominance of sound effects
stressed - unstressed syllable Trochee
Focus on poetic form: the sonnet origins? form? -origins in Italy Two forms: 1.) Italian/Petrarchan sonnet 2.) English/Shakespearian sonnet Form: octave and sestet (8+6 lines of verse)--> 14 lines
Shakespearian Sonnet Rhyme schema ababcdcd efefgg (break intention: soon there’ll be an ending, but not yet over) Iambic pentameter
Focus on prose form: the short story history of the short story? -collection: Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales (1386-1389) -Edgar Allan Poe: not only did he write short stories, but also commented on them (one of the first theoretition: he defines short story: story that you can read in one sitting; single effect: more focused on one thing, contributes to one event, effect, ...) -published in collections or magazines -start in medias in res -situations, not characters -compression/condensation: a lot of thought goes into a few words (you have to fill in quite a lot of things, you have to imagine quite a lot in additions)
short stories: Epiphany reference to a moment in short stories where characters realize sth insightful that might change their image, worldview, life → often in short stories
A nanostory -subcategory of shortstory -extremely condensed story, almost like a summary but it isn’t -Minimalistic story, not even 100 words -literary forms adapt to modern technologies: nanostories became extremely widespread, when email developed -very minimalistic but basic ingredients of short story are there
Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

10 Basic English Questions - Quiz 1
Leo JC
Strengths and Weaknesses of Psychological Approaches
Robyn Chamberlain
NCEA level 1 Genetics
Summery16
Animal vs. Plant Cells
JimJam5
History - Medicine through Time
Alice Love
Advantages and Disadvantages of Parliamentary Law making
Sinead Gapp
IT - The Online World
Summir
GCSE AQA Chemistry Atomic Structure and Bonding
mustafizk
TOK mindmap “Without application in the world, the value of knowledge is greatly diminished.”
Gabriela Serpa
Two years and no baby
Zahra Habeeb
3MA114 Management_test 1/2
Jakub Beyr