Imagery Feature Menu What Is an Image? Imagery in Poetry Practice.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
My Five Senses Created by:.
Advertisements

Thinking & Writing about Poetry
Imagery.
Hilltop High School English 9 PLC
Imagery & Figurative Language
Elements of poetry 6th Grade Reading.
Poetry 6th Grade Mrs. Tatum.
Journal Describe one moment of your life with as much detail as possible incorporating all 5 senses (sight, smell, touch, taste, sound). Your description.
LITERARY TERMS Know them, use them, LOVE them! Hyperbole A figure of speech in which exaggeration is used for emphasis or effect, as in I could sleep.
Literary Techniques: Poetry Analysis 1
Imagery The Scarlet Ibis.
Imagery and Sensory Details. Do Now Name a place that is important to you. Write down the place and 3 adjectives that describes this place. Ex: Your favorite.
Sensory Imagery in Poetry
Poet: The term used for an author of poetry. Stanza: Poem paragraph Line of Poetry: Single line of words in a poem. DOES NOT need to be a complete sentence!
What Is an Image? Imagery in Poetry Practice Feature Menu.
Imagery Brought to you by powerpointpros.com. What is Imagery? Imagery is “mental images” that writers create using words and phrases that appeal to our.
Writing a Descriptive Essay
Imagery Devices. Writers often use imagery to help readers create pictures in their minds of that about which the author is writing. There are a number.
Imagery Frankenstein.
‘Anthem for Doomed Youth’
Journal Wednesday From your seat in the classroom, look out the window. Write down everything you can see. Give as many details as possible. Using.
P OETRY U NIT Lesson One Notes: Imagery. L ESSON O NE : I MAGERY Image Single word or phrase that appeals to one of our five senses (sight, sound, taste,
Images in Poetry Bringing a poet’s world into focus...
Introducing the Poem Literary Focus: Imagery A Blessing by James Wright Feature Menu.
Describe the situation Make sure to use language that appeals to all of your senses! What would you see? What would you feel? What would you hear? What.
What is Poetry???. Poetry is…Poetry is the most emotionally charged means of written expression and it consists of words arranged in patterns of sound.
Same Song by Pat Mora Introducing the Poem
What Is Imagery? Imagery and Feelings Practice Imagery Feature Menu.
Why Learn How to Read a Poem? Tips for Reading Poetry Use the Strategy
A Descriptive Essay.
Purpose Haiku want to sight AND sound, smell, taste, and touch preserve a moment in time and present the reader with a vivid sensory image Remember: imagery.
Imagery “Showing vs. Telling”. Imagery Creates a picture in a reader’s mind Descriptive language that appeals to all 5 senses: Touch, Smell, Taste, Sight,
Poetry Language that is rhythmic, shortened, uses figures of speech and imagery to appeal to emotion and imagination.
The Five Senses 1 st Grade Science Ms. Donato Click to Continue.
Imagery / Persona. What is Imagery? An image is a vividly imagined detail that speaks to your sense of sight, hearing, smell, taste, or touch. An image.
Poetry Review!!!. Select a Category Figurative Language Mood Types of Poems TPCASTT/ Examples
Imagery A common misconception is that imagery is solely a mental picture. Although this is not wrong, it is not entirely right either.
Literary Devices and Memoir What is a METAPHOR? A metaphor compares two things, but it does it directly without using “as” or “like”.
How to Write Poetry. Tips For Writing Poems  Don’t be scared of a blank page. Inspiration for writing poems is limitless. Look at a blank page for its.
Poetry, Figurative Language, and Sound Devices
Poetic Devices: The Images of Words
-Charles Dickens, The Pickwick Papers
Create a metaphor for an LBQ/DBQ Outline in one sentence.
Elements of Poetry “Poems are pattern in motion, like music but gifted with human speech.” -Leonard Nathan, Contemporary Poet.
-What is the most difficult part about poetry to you?
"Introduction to Poetry"
2nd 6 Weeks Warm-Ups.
Imagery Feature Menu What Is an Image? Imagery in Poetry Practice.
Imagery.
Imagery Feature Menu What Is an Image? Imagery in Poetry Practice.
Imagery Feature Menu What Is an Image? Imagery in Poetry Practice.
Imagery in Of Mice and Men
Introduction to Poetry (Figurative Language and Poetic Devices)
Imagery and symbolism.
Imagery Feature Menu What Is an Image? Imagery in Poetry Practice.
What is poetry? The art of a poet Literary work in verse of
Imagery Feature Menu What Is an Image? Imagery in Poetry Practice.
Imagery Feature Menu What Is an Image? Imagery in Poetry Practice.
-What is the most difficult part about poetry to you?
What Is an Image? Listen to this excerpt of “The Shell” by James Stephens and imagine the scene he describes. And straightway like a bell Came low and.
Imagery Feature Menu What Is an Image? Imagery in Poetry Practice.
Hyperbole I’m so hungry I could eat a horse! Does anyone have something I could eat? Could you eat a horse?
Imagery Feature Menu What Is an Image? Imagery in Poetry Practice.
11 Qualitative v. Quantitative Observations
Imagery Feature Menu What Is an Image? Imagery in Poetry Practice.
Imagery Feature Menu What Is an Image? Imagery in Poetry Practice.
Imagery Feature Menu What Is an Image? Imagery in Poetry Practice.
Imagery Feature Menu What Is an Image? Imagery in Poetry Practice.
Imagery Feature Menu What Is an Image? Imagery in Poetry Practice.
What Is an Image? Imagery in Poetry Practice Imagery Feature Menu.
Presentation transcript:

Imagery Feature Menu What Is an Image? Imagery in Poetry Practice

What Is an Image? An image is a word or phrase that appeals to one of our senses. Images can help us create a mental picture hear a sound feel texture or temperature taste a sweet, sour, or salty flavor

What Is an Image? Listen to this excerpt of “The Shell” by James Stephens and imagine the scene he describes. And straightway like a bell Came low and clear The slow, sad murmur of the distant seas, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . And in the hush of waters was the sound Of pebbles rolling round, For ever rolling with a hollow sound. And bubbling sea-weeds as the waters go Swish to and fro Their long, cold tentacles of slimy grey. —from “The Shell” by James Stephens

What Is an Image? Quick Check Which words appeal to the sense of hearing? sight? touch? And straightway like a bell Came low and clear The slow, sad murmur of the distant seas, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . And in the hush of waters was the sound Of pebbles rolling round, For ever rolling with a hollow sound. And bubbling sea-weeds as the waters go Swish to and fro Their long, cold tentacles of slimy grey. —from “The Shell” by James Stephens [End of Section]

What Is an Image? Quick Check Which words appeal to the sense of hearing? sight? touch? And straightway like a bell Came low and clear The slow, sad murmur of the distant seas, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . And in the hush of waters was the sound Of pebbles rolling round, For ever rolling with a hollow sound. And bubbling sea-weeds as the waters go Swish to and fro Their long, cold tentacles of slimy grey. —from “The Shell” by James Stephens Hearing Sight Touch

Imagery in Poetry Poets and painters both create vivid images. Painters choose from a palette of colors to create different textures and moods in their works. Poets also have a palette—a palette of words—from which they choose just the right words to create a sensory experience for the reader.

Imagery in Poetry Poets use imagery to speak to our deepest feelings—joy, sorrow, wonder, love emphasize certain qualities of the subject create a mood Out on the land White Moon shines. Shines and glimmers against gnarled shadows, All silver to slow twisted shadows Falling across the long road that runs from the house. —from “Baby Face” by Carl Sandburg

Imagery in Poetry Imagery is part of a poet’s style a product of the poet’s own way of seeing the world a reflection of the time and place in which the poet lives

Imagery in Poetry Quick Check What mood does the poet create through his use of imagery? The Loon by Lew Sarett A lonely lake, a lonely shore, A lone pine leaning on the moon; All night the water-beating wings Of a solitary loon. With mournful wail from dusk to dawn He gibbered at the taunting stars,— A hermit-soul gone raving mad, And beating at his bars. How does the imagery affect your emotions? Explain. [End of Section]

Imagery in Poetry Quick Check What mood does the poet create through his use of imagery? The Loon by Lew Sarett A lonely lake, a lonely shore, A lone pine leaning on the moon; All night the water-beating wings Of a solitary loon. With mournful wail from dusk to dawn He gibbered at the taunting stars,— A hermit-soul gone raving mad, And beating at his bars. still, lonely, sorrowful

Imagery in Poetry Quick Check How does the imagery affect your emotions? Explain. The Loon by Lew Sarett A lonely lake, a lonely shore, A lone pine leaning on the moon; All night the water-beating wings Of a solitary loon. With mournful wail from dusk to dawn He gibbered at the taunting stars,— A hermit-soul gone raving mad, And beating at his bars. I feel sad when I picture the desolate scene and hear the bird struggling alone.

Practice Images can be drawn from all sorts of things we observe in life. For each category, create two images—one pleasant and one unpleasant. Try to include images that appeal to all five senses. Images Pleasant Unpleasant Animal images Flower images Water images Sky images Earth images City images Country images

The End