ELA 7 Literary Devices and Poetry Analysis

Description

Created for the ELA 7 Poetry Unit in Alberta
Gabriel Beldad
Note by Gabriel Beldad, updated more than 1 year ago
Gabriel Beldad
Created by Gabriel Beldad almost 4 years ago
4
0

Resource summary

Page 1

Common Figures of Speech and Literary Devices

Allusion - a reference to something or some person from literature, religious lore, or history  EX: "All overgrown by cunning moss, All interspersed with weed, the little cage of "Currer Bell" in quiet "Haworth" laid." -  Emily Dickinson's "All Overgrown by Cunning Moss" Analogy - a comparison of two similar things where the familiar is used to explain the unfamiliar EX: "Life is a box of chocolates - you never know what you're gonna get" - Forest Gump Atmosphere - the emotional feeling created by elements in literature  EX: The difference between: "Marilyn’s small apartment was bathed with light from the new floor-to-ceiling windows. Outside, the sounds of a balmy summer day floated up to her ears like the gurgle of a cool, clear brook." and "Marilyn’s cramped apartment was roasting in the scorching sunlight that burned through her floor-to-ceiling windows. And if there was anything more oppressive than the heat, it had to be the constant din that bubbled up from the city street below like steam from a putrid stew." Connotation - The field of associations which surround a word  EX: "Look at that dog." The word "dog" connotates to ugliness, which can be applied to a person. Denotation - The exact dictionary definition of a word  EX: "Look at that dog." If you denotate this phrase, it means that there is literally a dog. Foreshadowing - Indicating or suggesting before it happens what will occur later in the work of literature  EX:  Sometimes a future event is mentioned earlier in the story, like a comment about a meeting between characters. The reader already knows that issues will be discussed later. Idiom - a turn of phrase or expression that normally wouldn't make sense but have an alternative meaning (often regional)  EX: I'm going to go hit the hay  OR  That test was a breeze Imagery - word-pictures; often used to convey a certain mood  EX: "The sound of a drum in the distance attracted him." In this case, an audial representation is found. Metaphor - a direct comparison between two things (not using like or as)  EX: She is an angel Mood - the emotional environment or atmosphere created by the writer  EX: What you feel Oxymoron - an expression that combines opposite or contradictory ideas  EX: "Bittersweet"  OR  "Alone together" Personification - the characteristics of persons are attributed to inanimate objects and abstract ideas (sometimes animals fall under this category, but that is considered anthropomorphism)  EX: "The leaves danced in the wind."  Pun - a play on words; the humorous use of a word or phrase to emphasize or suggest different meanings or applications; words that are alike or nearly alike in sound, but different in meaning  EX: Yesterday, a clown held the door open for me. It was such a nice jester! Simile - a comparison between two things of unlike nature using like, as, or than  EX: It was as nice as a peaceful panda Symbolism - something that suggests or stands for something else  EX: The color black can symbolize death or evil Tone - the artist's attitude towards the subject of his writing or towards the audience  ​​​​​​​EX: How the author wants to make it feel  

Page 2

Common Sound Devices

Alliteration - the repetition of initial sounds in words  EX: "Becky's beagle barked and bayed, becoming bothersome for Billy." There is a repetition of "B's" Assonance - repetition of the same vowel sound in a line of poetry  EX: "If I bleat when I speak it's because I just got . . . fleeced." - "Deadwood" by Al Swearengen Slant Rhyme - a near-rhyme but not exact  EX: "cat"  and  "sad" Internal Rhyme - rhyme that occurs within a line, rather than exactly at the end  EX: "I went to town to buy a gown. / I took the car, and it wasn't far." Rhyme - similar sound between accented syllables in the same position in two or more lines of verse EX: "When I was a young boy, I went to beach, and right while I was playing, I stumbled upon a leach." Rhythm - the recurrence of stressed and unstressed syllables  EX: "She made a star on her car." Onomatopoeia - the sound of the word mimics the sound to which it refers  EX: "SPLASH!"  OR  "KABOOM!" Consonance - repetition of an interior consonant sound within a short sentence  EX: "Borrow"  and  "Sorrow" End Rhyme - rhyme that occurs at the end of lines  EX: “may came home with a smooth round stone as small as a world and as large as alone. For whatever we lose (like a you or a me) it's always ourselves we find in the sea”

Page 3

Poetry Analysis: TP CASTT Method

The TP CASTT method:   TITLE: consider denotative meanings of the title before reading the poem PARAPHRASE: translate (on a literal level - don't interpret things) the poem into your own words (best done stanza by stanza) - don't focus on each word  but rather the overall idea of each stanza CONNOTATION: consider meanings beyond the literal  ATTITUDE: observe both the speaker's and the poet's attitudes SHIFTS: note any changes in the speaker or attitude due to: occasion, key words, punctuation, stanza divisions, line and stanza length changes TITLE: examine the title again - now consider it on a more interpretive level THEME: determine what the poet is saying (what message about life are they trying to convey?)

Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

Answering Unseen Poetry questions
mcglynnsiobhan
Dulce Et Decorum Est
Catherine Joy
To Kill a Mockingbird -Analysis of Major Characters
sungiemarie
John Montague
Tara Matthews
Animal Farm Chapter Overview
10jgorman
Futility Flashcards
louisaodell
Love through the ages
acasilva001
Hardy's Key Themes
lucysands1
Romeo and Juliet: Key Points
mbennett
Of Mice & Men Themes - Key essay points
Lilac Potato