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Unit 3: Poetry & Analyze Literature

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  1. poetry
    literature in metrical form
    Poetry is a major genre of literature and includes narrative, dramatic, and lyric poems.
  2. prose
    ordinary writing as distinguished from verse
    Poetry differs from prose in that it compresses meaning into fewer words and often uses meter, rhyme, and imagery.
  3. lyric
    of or relating to poetry that expresses emotion
    A lyric poem is a highly musical type of poetry that expresses the emotions of a speaker.
  4. narrative
    consisting of or characterized by the telling of a story
    Lyric poems can be contrasted with narrative poems, which have storytelling as their main purpose.
  5. dramatic
    characteristic of a stage performance
    Lyric poems also can be contrasted with dramatic poems, which rely heavily on dramatic elements such as monologue (speech by a single character) and dialogue (conversation involving two or more characters).
  6. theme
    a unifying idea that is a recurrent element in literary work
    The themes of lyric poetry are as varied as love and loss, war and peace, and religion and nature.
  7. elegy
    a mournful poem; a lament for the dead
    Some lyric poems are elegies, mourning the dead in the manner of Walt Whitman’s “O Captain! My Captain!” which was composed after the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln.
  8. ode
    a lyric poem with complex stanza forms
    Another lyric form is the ode, a poem on a serious theme, usually with varying line lengths and complex stanzas.
  9. free verse
    poetry that does not rhyme or have a regular meter
    To celebrate the nation, Whitman composed his Leaves of Grass as a “lyric-epic,” an open form characterized by free verse, what he called his “language experiment.”
  10. form
    an arrangement of the elements in a composition or discourse
    Form refers to the organization of the parts of a poem.
  11. stanza
    a fixed number of lines of verse forming a unit of a poem
    The stanza, a group of lines in a poem, varies in average length from two to eight lines.
  12. rhyme
    correspondence in the final sounds of two or more lines
    Examining a stanza, you will notice the presence or absence of a rhyme scheme.
  13. internal rhyme
    a rhyme between words in the same line
    Even poems without exact end rhyme may include slant rhyme, in which the rhyming sounds are similar but not identical, or internal rhyme, the use of rhyming words within lines.
  14. enjambment
    continuation from one line of verse into the next line
    Dickinson also frequently uses enjambment, continuing a statement beyond the end of a line, rather than the end-stopped line of verse, in which both the sense and the grammar are complete at the end of the line.
  15. catalog
    a complete list of things, usually arranged systematically
    Whitman also incorporated into his poems catalogs, or lists of items, as you will see in the excerpt from “Song of Myself.”
  16. meter
    a pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in verse
    Meter is a regular rhythmic pattern in poetry.
  17. rhythm
    alternation of stressed and unstressed elements in speech
    A poem’s meter creates rhythm, the pattern of beats or stresses in a line of verse or prose.
  18. foot
    a group of syllables forming the basic unit of poetic rhythm
    Stressed and unstressed syllables are divided into rhythmical units called feet.
  19. figurative
    not literal
    Many poets use figurative language—writing or speech that is meant to be understood imaginatively instead of literally—to help readers to see things in new ways.
  20. hyperbole
    extravagant exaggeration
    Types of figurative language include hyperbole, metaphor, personification, simile, and understatement.
  21. metaphor
    a figure of speech that suggests a non-literal similarity
    Types of figurative language include hyperbole, metaphor, personification, simile, and understatement.
  22. personification
    attributing human characteristics to abstract ideas
    Types of figurative language include hyperbole, metaphor, personification, simile, and understatement.
  23. simile
    a figure of speech expressing a resemblance between things
    Types of figurative language include hyperbole, metaphor, personification, simile, and understatement.
  24. understatement
    something said in a restrained way for ironic contrast
    Types of figurative language include hyperbole, metaphor, personification, simile, and understatement.
  25. repetition
    the continued use of the same word or word pattern
    Repetition is a writer’s intentional reuse of a sound, word, phrase, or sentence.
  26. alliteration
    use of the same consonant at the beginning of each word
    Alliteration is the repetition of an initial consonant sound, as in “the cow crunching” and “a mouse is a miracle.”
  27. assonance
    the repetition of similar vowels in successive words
    Assonance is the repetition of vowel sounds in stressed syllables that end with different consonant sounds.
  28. stereotype
    a conventional or formulaic conception or image
    A stereotype is an uncritically accepted fixed or conventional idea, particularly such an idea held about a whole group of people.
  29. tone
    a quality that reveals the attitudes of the author
    Tone is the emotional attitude toward the reader or toward the subject implied by a literary work.
  30. parallelism
    similarity by virtue of corresponding
    Parallelism is a technique in which a writer emphasizes the equal value of two or more ideas by expressing them in the same grammatical form.
  31. antithesis
    the juxtaposition of contrasting words or ideas for balance
    Antithesis is a technique in which words, phrases, or ideas are contrasted, often by repetition of a grammatical structure.
  32. Romanticism
    a movement in literature and art during the late 18th and early 19th centuries that celebrated nature rather than civilization
    Romanticism was a literary and artistic movement of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries that placed value on emotion or imagination over reason, the individual over society, and freedom over authority.
  33. onomatopoeia
    using words that imitate the sound they denote
    Onomatopoeia is the use of words or phrases that sound like the things to which they refer, such as buzz, click, and pop.
Created on Wed Mar 03 08:57:48 EST 2021 (updated Fri Mar 12 12:06:38 EST 2021)

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