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Elements of Poetry In “Being Brought from Africa to America”
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Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

Aug 05, 2018

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Page 1: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

Elements of Poetry

In“Being Brought from Africa to America”

Page 2: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

STANZA

Similar to paragraphs in other types of writing

How lines of a poem are grouped together and separated from other lines of the poems by a space.

Page 3: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

THEME

A main idea in a work of literature.

A theme is not the same as a subject. The subject of a work can usually be expressed in a word or two: love, childhood, death. A theme is an idea or message that the writer wishes to convey aboutthat subject.

Page 4: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

TONE

The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience.

For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere. When people speak, their tone of voice gives added meaning to what they say. Writers use written language to create effects similar to those that people create with their voices.

Page 5: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

IRONYA situation, or a use of language,

involving some kind of incongruity or discrepancy; the contrast between actual meaning and the suggestion of another meaning.

VERBAL IRONY-meaning one thing and saying the opposite of what is intended

DRAMATIC IRONY-a device by which the author implies a different meaning from that intended by the speaker

Page 6: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

METAPHOR

A comparison between two unlike things in which one thing becomes another thing.

Page 7: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

SIMILE

A comparison between two unlike things, using a word such as like, as, than, seems, appears, or resembles.

Page 8: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

PERSONIFICATION

A figure of speech in which an object or animal is spoken of as if it had human feelings, thoughts, or attitudes.

Page 9: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

CONNOTATION

What a word suggests beyond its basic definition

The tones or implications that a word or phrase may carry with them distinguished from their denotative meanings.

Page 10: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

ALLUSION

A reference, explicit or implicit, to something in another work of literature, art, or in history.

Page 11: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

RHYMEThe repetition of sounds at the end of

words.

RHYME SCHEME

The pattern of end rhymes.

Page 12: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

REPETITION

Refers to sounds, words, or phrases that are repeated

Page 13: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

PUN

A pun is a play on words in which a humorous effect is produced by using a word that suggests two or more meanings or by exploiting similar sounding words having different meanings.

Page 14: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

SYNECDOCHE

Synecdoche is a literary device in which a part of something represents the whole or it may use a whole to represent a part.

Page 15: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

NARRATIVE POETRY

a form of poetry that tells a story, often making use of the voices of a narrator and characters as well; the entire story is usually written in metred verse. Narrative poems do not have to follow rhythmic patterns.

Page 16: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

IAMBIC PENTAMETER

A foot is an iamb if it consists of one unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable, so the word remark is an iamb. Pent means five, so a line of iambic pentameter consists of five iambs – five sets of unstressed syllables followed by stressed syllables.

Page 17: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

HEROIC COUPLET

a traditional form for English poetry, commonly used in epic and narrative poetry, and consisting of a rhyming pair of lines in iambic pentameter.

Page 18: Elements of Poetry of...TONE The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. For example, a writer’s tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere.

IMPERATIVE

Imperative is defined as a requirement or an order.

In poetry, when an author writes using an imperative style, they are telling their audience how to think, act, or feel.