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Writing about Poetry for English Literature GCSE

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Writing about Poetry for English Literature GCSE How to excel Writing about Poetry You MUST answer the question precisely. They are worded in different but specific ways. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Writing about Poetry for English Literature GCSE


1
Writing about Poetry for English Literature GCSE
  • How to excel

2
Writing about Poetry
  • You MUST answer the question precisely. They are
    worded in different but specific ways.

3
Writing about Poetry
  • Purpose (author)
  • Devices (form language)
  • Comparisons (within between)
  • Contrasts (within between)
  • Control (detail and whole text)

4
Writing about Poetry
  • Analyse sensitive insight, independent
    evaluative response
  • Explore developed, qualified, measured,
    independent response
  • Explain sustained and structured response
  • Identify structured comments

5
Writing about Poetry
  • You will HAVE to choose TWO poems from the
    pre-1914 batch, ONE by Simon Armitage and ONE by
    Carol Ann Duffy.
  • Think COUNTDOWN. "Two from the top row one from
    the middle row one from the bottom row."

6
Writing about Poetry
  • Think COUNTDOWN. "Two from the top row one from
    the middle row one from the bottom row.

7
Writing about Poetry
8
Writing about Poetry
  • Opening paragraph should link all four poems the
    red region, the bull's eye.
  • (Although the blue regions look important,
    revealing overlaps between three of the four
    poems, we advise for practical reasons to omit
    them.)

9
Writing about Poetry
10
Writing about Poetry
  • Your essay will gain a lot of marks for
    COMPARISON, so use the GREEN sectors to focus on
    comparisons between pairs of poems.
  • (The clever ones amongst you will realise that
    the green sectors therefore must subsume and
    include the blue sectors!)
  • Keep your eye on the bull's eye bring back each
    comparison, however far you've gone, to the key
    red overlap.

11
Writing about Poetry
12
Writing about Poetry
  • Spend ONE HOUR on the poem essay there are more
    marks awarded to the poetry essay than to the
    prose (short story) essay.
  • You do not have to write the same amount on each
    poem. You MUST write something on each poem the
    most marks are reserved for COMPARISON.

13
Writing about Poetry
  • You do not have to write the same amount on each
    poem.
  • You MUST write something on each poem.
  • The most marks are reserved for COMPARISON.
  • A more accurate Venn diagram might therefore look
    something like this.

14
Writing about Poetry
  • The clever ones amongst you might notice that
    although the basic circles here - mainly yellow-
    vary according to the poems chosen, the green
    areas - the key comparisons - remain broadly
    equal.
  • Interesting.

15
Writing about Poetry
  • When the examiners refer to 'comparison', they
    are also including 'contrast'. Think of
    comparisons and contrasts.
  • In comparing between 'old' and 'modern' poems, it
    is permissible to draw attention to the
    differences evident as a result of the periods in
    which they were composed.
  • The more you compare, the better your answer.

16
Writing about Poetry
  • Think of different responses and interpretations.
    You might want to compare and contrast the way
    readers might be expected to respond to each of
    the different poems.
  • Integrate comparisons within paragraphs.
  • Use concise quotations to support your argument.

17
Writing about Poetry
  • Use the MAGIC TRIANGLE to make sure you are
    making the right sort of points.

18
Writing about Poetry
  • Here is a sample question to consider
  • In Hitcher, Simon Armitage writes about a
    deviant or disturbed character.
  • Compare Hitcher with one poem by Duffy and two
    pre-1914 poems that present deviant or disturbed
    personalities.

19
Writing about Poetry
  • Discourse Markers
  • Managing Comparisons
  • Similarly
  • In the same way
  • Also
  • We can see a similar effect
  • Just as so
  • This is also true of
  • Equally

20
Writing about Poetry
  • Discourse Markers
  • Managing Contrasts
  • On the other hand
  • But when we look at
  • Although
  • Whereas
  • While

21
Writing about Poetry
  • Discourse Markers
  • Managing Conclusions
  • Finally,
  • In the end,
  • All the poets
  • When the reader considers all this,
  • To sum up
  • The most important reason

22
Writing about Poetry
  • Discourse Markers
  • Expressing attitude and feeling
  • Possibly,
  • Probably,
  • Superficially,
  • Of course,
  • To be precise,
  • In my experience,
  • This could mean
  • It may be
  • Perhaps
  • It seems to me that

23
Writing about Poetry
  • Discourse Markers
  • Exploring different approached and
    interpretations
  • Some people may think that
  • It is often said that
  • It could be that
  • Alternatively,
  • On the other hand,

24
Writing about Poetry
  • Use technical terms to show your ability at
    analysing poetry.
  • Simile, metaphor
  • Personification, symbolism
  • Rhythm, rhyme
  • Colloquial language
  • Lexical field
  • Direct address to the reader
  • Dramatic monologue
  • Voice, persona
  • Imagery, motif
  • Closure, resolution
  • Ambiguity, ambivalence

25
Writing about Poetry
  • Tip
  • Begin with the technical term and then make
    something of it.
  • (You wont get high marks, will you, for just
    spotting the fact that two words rhyme. Year 7
    know that.)

26
Writing about Poetry
  • Begin with the technical term and then make
    something of it.
  • The image which Armitage presents us with at the
    beginning of the second stanza is violent and
    challenging.
  • Throughout the poem, internal rhyme is used to
    tighten the structure and to create a rather
    intense and focused mood.
  • Brownings complex grammar suits the essentially
    evasive manner of the Duke.

27
Writing about Poetry
  • See how all these sentences require a paragraph
    to develop and explain their ideas
  • The image which Armitage presents us with at the
    beginning of the second stanza is violent and
    challenging.
  • Throughout the poem, internal rhyme is used to
    tighten the structure and to create a rather
    intense and focused mood.
  • Brownings complex grammar suits the essentially
    evasive manner of the Duke.

28
Writing about Poetry
  • Use these techniques in the question about poems
    from different cultures as well as in the
    English Literature essay on poetry.
  • This presentation is accessible on the school
    website.
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