Friday, 26 June 2015

AS A2 LL - READING POETRY - SOME KEY QUESTIONS

Reading Poetry
Some Key Questions

Below are some key questions and prompt statements to help you reflect and analyse each poem we study.
·         Comment on the poetic voice of the poem.

 There maybe more than one voice – different voices may offer different perspectives on the themes raised. For example the voice maybe male, female, young, old, subjective, objective, detached, engaged. Is the voice angry, sad, joyful etc

·         What is the main subject of the poem?

The title of the poem may give you a clue to the poem’s subject. Make a note of the subject and consider how the subject is being presented. Be prepared for the presentation of the subject to change and develop through the poem. The subject maybe a character, an object, a location, etc

·         What happens in the poem?

Sometimes poems tell stories, they are narrative poems. And sometimes there are developments and time shifts that occur. Often poets include autobiography in their poetry and write about the past – sometimes using the present tense. Action, movement and stasis are important to consider.

·         What are the main themes or issues raised in the poem?

Although the subject of a poem maybe physical and material a poem will also engage with broader and more abstract set of concepts. Themes may occur explicitly or implicitly. Issues are usually clearly defined where the poet presents a conscious position on a subject.

·         Comment on the setting and context[s] of the poem.

An important element in poetry can be the poem’s setting. The immediate setting is the physical landscape that frames the subject of the poem. Poets use setting to develop the themes, subject and meaning of a poem. Contexts are broader and more abstract and may link to political, cultural, social and historical concerns. Contexts often involve the poet and the personal and societal

·         Comment on the structure and form of the poem.

Poems are usually highly organized texts. A poet will have worked and reworked their material to suit their purposes and to engage the reader.  The physical shape of the poem and the way it is presented on the page will help convey the poem’s meaning.

·         Response to the poem.

To consider all the above questions carefully and reflectively will help you develop an informed, sensitive, thoughtful, imaginative, analytical response to these poems. In turn this will help you enormously to write a good 1000 word essay.

What key language and literary features can you identify and what effect do these features have on a reader?

  • What genre does the poem draw from? Consider whether the poem is largely descriptive, narrative, monologue, dialogue, abstract, physical, etc

  • Generally poets use two different techniques to communicate to their readers. One is imagery – where poets appeal to the imaginations of their readers. For example; metaphor, simile, symbolism and personification. The other technique is phonology – where a poet uses sound to appeal to their readers. For example; alliteration, assonance, rhyme, onomatopoeia and repetition etc. Another unique feature of poetry is the use of form. At its most basic consider the shape of the poem on the page. Is there any specific pattern to them poem? Is the poem a ballad, a sonnet or lyric poem? Is it written in free verse? Consider such things as line length – iambic pentameters and tetrameters are two line structures. But also consider stanzas.

·         You should also consider such features as – grammar – the structures that exist within a sentence. For example identifying verbs, nouns and adjectives. Lexis – or vocabulary. Consider such things as simple or complex, emotive or neutral words. Also the denotations and connotations of words. Syntax – sentence structure. Consider such things as simple, compound or complex sentences. As well as declarative, interrogative, instructional and exclamatory sentences.  Rhetorical devices – are techniques designed to persuade a reader to a specific point of view. These techniques include repetition, comparative and contrasting pairs, lists and lists of three and direct address, etc. Register – is the relationship the poetic voice adopts towards the reader. This is established through using either formal or informal lexis.

 

  • Identifying features in a poem will not enable you to get good grades in your assessments. It is vital that you link the features of a poem to the effects on you and a generalised reader. You may also be required to link the work you are studying to specific contextual references – these may be biographical or cultural. You may also be expected to refer to theoretical perspectives such as Marxism or Feminism.

 

One  2500 word essay comparing two poets on a comparative theme