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Do you smell what I’m saying ?

Do you smell what I’m saying ?. Do you see that sound? I hear what you smell. Can you taste what I’m touching? I smell your feelings. SYN EST HE SIA. When two senses are bl en de d to create beautiful, interesting, original imagery in writing.

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Do you smell what I’m saying ?

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  1. Do you smell what I’m saying? Do you see that sound? I hear what you smell. Can you taste what I’m touching? I smell your feelings.

  2. SYNESTHESIA • When two senses areblendedto create beautiful, interesting, original imagery in writing. • What sense do you usually associate with heat?

  3. Consider this……. • “Can you hear the heat?” • “Can you smell the heat?”

  4. Begin with the 5 Senses:

  5. One of the most famous examples of synesthesia in poetry comes from the French poet Arthur Rimbaud, who wrote the poem "Vowels" based on the idea that certain vowels contain certain color associations: Black A, white E, red I, green U, blue O—

  6. Examples: Nick Carraway, the narrator of F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, recounts "yellow cocktail music" playing at one of Gatsby's parties.

  7. Example: Annihilating all that's made To a green thought in a green shade "The Garden”

  8. Example: • "I catch the sound and it takes me into the cold." • (Emily Raboteau, The Professor's Daughter. Henry Holt, 2005)

  9. Example: • "I am hearing the shape of the rain
Take the shape of the tent and believe it . . ..” • (James Dickey, opening lines of "The Mountain Tent")

  10. WHAT IF ????? Look at an image/noun/color and ask yourself – “If this were a sound, what would it sound like?” or “If it were a feeling, what would it feel like?”

  11. Let’s try! What does it sound like? What does it feel like? What does it taste like? What does it smell like?

  12. What does it sound like? What does it feel like? What does it taste like? What does it smell like?

  13. What If? • Notice a feeling or sensation– if you had to paint it, what color/shape/size would it be? If you had to play it on an instrument, how would it sound? Don’t strain or try to think of something clever – just notice what images, sounds or feelings naturally come to mind when you ask yourself the questions.

  14. Let’s try it! • Focus on the feeling. You choose: • FEAR, ANGER, HOPE, MISERY, LONELINESS • If you had to paint it, what color would it be? What shape? If you had to play it on an instrument, how would it sound?

  15. Listen to a piece of music and ask “If this were a picture, what color would it be?” or “If it were a person, how would s/he talk? What would s/he say?”

  16. “Dream On”What colors do you see as you listen to this song? If you could touch this song, what would it feel like?

  17. EXAMPLE: • "I hear the bouncing hills” Dylan Thomas

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