Today, we are going to 1) Discuss what prompt you choose last night, why, and what book you wrote on. 2) Look at the Unit on poetry. 3) Look at "The Myth of Music" and discuss it.
https://secure-media.collegeboard.org/digitalServices/pdf/ap/ap17-english-literature-q1.pdf
Poetry, Exploration of Themes, and Literary Theories
Unit 1: Introduction to Poetry (4 weeks)
All pages refer to Perrine’s Literature: Structure, Sound, and Sense
Week 1: Literary Terms Specific to Poetry
Imagery: Pages 771-774, “After Apple-Picking” – Questions & Journal
Symbol/Allegory: 807-817, “The Road Not Taken” – Questions, Journal
Paradox, Irony, Satire: 829-839, “My Last Duchess” – Journal
Tone: 880-885, “The Man He Killed” – Questions and Journal
Alliteration, Assonance, Consonance: 899-907, various poems
Week 2: Forms of Poetry
Sonnet, Stanza, Ballad, Haiku, Villanelle, Pantoum, Blues, Blank Verse,
Quatrain, Couplet, Ode, Blank Verse, Dramatic Monologue, Prose Poem,
Epic Poem
In Journals – students will need to explain how each form works and how form = idea
Week 3: Great Poets (focus on Modernism)
Theme: The Individual’s Place in Society
Frost – “Death of the Hired-Man”, “Home Burial”
Eliot – “Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock”, “Wastelands”
Brooke- “The Dead”
Wilfred Owen – “Dulce et Decorum Est”
Hughes – “Theme for English B”
Bishop – “The Fish”
Jarrell – “Death of Ball-Turret Gunner”
Forche – “The Colonel”
Clifton – “Good Times”
Plath – “Mad Girl’s Love Song”
And perhaps Berryman and Dylan Thomas.
Week 4: In-Class essay, student’s poetry, poetry projects
Students will practice their hand at writing their own poems and
exploring literary devices and poetic form. These will be read out
loud.
Students will also choose one poem from “Poems for Further Reading” and
teach what the poem means and how it creates meaning by discussing form,
literary devices and perhaps social context
1st In-class essay.
Personal or Exploratory Essay 2-3 pages.
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