1 / 30

The Poetry of Emily Dickinson

The Poetry of Emily Dickinson. “Saying nothing… sometimes says the most”. EMILY’S TAKE ON WHAT MAKES POETRY. THE POETESS. Born in 1830 Father was a U.S. congressman Spent all her life in Massachusetts Famous for wearing only white when in public. EMILY: THE RECLUSE.

donagh
Download Presentation

The Poetry of Emily Dickinson

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Poetry of Emily Dickinson “Saying nothing… sometimes says the most”

  2. EMILY’S TAKE ON WHAT MAKES POETRY

  3. THE POETESS Born in 1830 Father was a U.S. congressman Spent all her life in Massachusetts Famous for wearing only white when in public

  4. EMILY: THE RECLUSE Spent most of her time in her room and rarely left—not even for her father’s funeral, which took place downstairs

  5. WHERE EMILY SLEPT

  6. PERSONA Was extremely reclusive & eccentric 1858-1865: published nearly 800 poems

  7. FEARS She was haunted by the “menace of death.” – She had an extreme fear of death.

  8. “I Heard a Fly Buzz When I Died”

  9. THEN & NOW THEN NOW Emily was so weird! She was a shy & “crazy” lady who never left her house and secretly wrote close to 2,000 that no one knew about until after she died. Emily was a talented poetess who chose to stay home alone and write in private.

  10. THINK-PAIR-SHARE Take out a blank sheet of paper. You will turn in your THINK-PAIR-SHARE. Do you think Emily Dickinson didn’t know how to act like a “normal” person – or do you think that she just didn’t want to? Was Emily really nuts, or was she just living her life her way, no matter what anybody else thought?

  11. CLOSE READING CLOSE READING! WHAT IS IT?

  12. Step 1: Close Reading Hold the text really close to your face.

  13. Just kidding.

  14. CLOSE READING Simply: analyzing a text in fine detail, as if with a magnifying glass. It’s what YOU find. Your findings do not evolve from someone else’s thoughts, but from your own observations.

  15. “Success is counted sweetest”

  16. HOW TO CLOSE READ “To begin, begin.” – William Wordsworth READ WITH A PENCIL! To begin close reading any text, start with some questions: Who is the speaker of the poem? Who is the audience? What is the occasion? What is the purpose? How is the purpose achieved?

  17. STEP 1: Read with a Pencil • Underline the major points. • Circle keywords or phrases that are confusing or unknown to you. • Use a question mark (?) for questions that you have during the reading. Be sure to write your question. • Use an exclamation mark (!) for things that surprise you, and briefly note what it was that caught your attention. • Draw an arrow (↵) when you make a connection to something inside the text, or to an idea or experience outside the text. Briefly note your connections. • Mark EX when the author provides an example. • Numerate arguments, important ideas, or key details and write words or phrases that restate them.

  18. STEP 2. . . First Impressions What is your first impression? What is your second impression? What mood does the poem create in you?

  19. STEP 3… Vocabulary & Diction Which words do you notice first? Why? What is noteworthy about this diction? How do the important words relate to one another? Do any words seem oddly used to you? Why? Do any words have double meanings? Do they have extra connotations? Look up any unfamiliar words.

  20. STEP 3… Looking at Patterns What is the sentence rhythm like? Short and choppy? Long and flowing? Does it build on itself or stay at an even pace? What is the style like? Look at the punctuation. Is there anything unusual about it? Is there any repetition within the passage? What is the effect of that repetition? How many types of writing are in the passage? (For example, narration, description, argument, dialogue, rhymed or alliterative poetry, etc.)

  21. STEP 4…What does it mean? Based on your close-reading, what does it all mean?

  22. “Hope is the thing with feathers”

  23. SPIRIT OF POETRY READ: THE RULES At random, read 1 line at a time out loud for the class from the poem. Start on any line. Do not pre-choose your line. When one person is done, start any time. If two people start reading, DO NOT STOP! Read at the same time. Do not read only 1 word – you have to commit to the line. Do not pick lines in order. If you want to read more than once, allow at least 4-5 lines pass. 

  24. “Because I could not stop for Death”

  25. A PARODY

  26. A CLOSE READING RESOURCE Purdue Online Writing Lab: https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/616/01/

  27. DEATH Died in May of 1886

  28. QUOTES

  29. QUOTES

  30. QUOTES

More Related