Step Two: Decide each group member’s focus within your assigned category: Nature Poetry, Music/Song Lyrics, and Poems Related to Relationships. Submit your choices. (10/31)
Step Three: Identify a set of poems (or songs) that have some commonality (one set per group member). The poems might be written by the same author and/or address the same theme/issue. Bring these poems/songs to your group meeting on 11/12. At this meeting, make a list of similarities and differences for each set of poems/songs. Consider the elements discussed in class : rhyme, meter, line length, word choice (formal/informal, positive/negative connotations, etc.), similes, metaphors, diction, etc. Also, submit a list of your primary sources, in MLA format, on this day.
Step Four: Meet with me (individual conference) to finalize your paper’s thesis statement. Bring your list of similarities and differences, and your poems/songs. Before the conference, consider what you want to say about these poems/songs. Your thesis will indicate the purpose of your comparison. (11/13 or 11/14)
Step Five: Library Day – Library presentation on finding background information related to particular poems, poets, genres, or songs. (11/17)
Step Six: Bring a rough draft of your paper to class (one for each of your group members), so they can provide feedback to you. (11/24)
Step Seven: Submit an almost final draft of your paper on 11/26 (or sooner) I will return these after the Thanksgiving holiday for final editing. Meet with your group member this week to plan the group presentation.
Step Eight: Meet with your group again to finalize your presentation. (12/1)
Step Nine: Give your presentation and submit your final paper. (12/2-12/5)
I am a full-time faculty member at Green River Community College. I have worked at the college since June 2000. My office is HSA-50 and my extension is 4250.
J1: Response to “Definition of poetry splits the literati”
J2: Parallels Heaney draws between his father’s profession and his own, as a poet?
J3: One example of alliteration and one simile in Robert Lowell's "Sailing Home from Rapallo"
J4: Does the language of “I’m Nobody! Who are you?” draw you in or distance you?
J5: Choose one (Atwood): Why is the second part of the poem in parenthesis? Is this poem meant to be literal or figurative?
J6: Identify the tone of either the Whitman or Hughes ("I, Too"), and the words/punctuation that led you to that conclusion.
J7: Rewrite one paragraph from your returned 1-page analysis, including a topic sentence, adequate support, and analysis.
J8: What is the crucial moment, experience, or idea captured within Countee Cullen's "Heritage"?
J9: Louise Erdrich's "I Was Sleeping Where the Black Oaks Move" (Group Presentation)
J10: Robert Frost's "Birches" (Group Presentation)
J11: Whitman's "A Noiseless Patient Spider" - What do the last three lines mean?
J12: What do the lamb and the tyger (in Blake) symbolize in today's world?
J13: Read your assigned poem a second time, this time writing down thoughts, reactions, questions, and associations that come to mind. Also note any words or parts you don’t understand and underline parts that are particularly moving or powerful to you.
J14: In your opinion, why has "The Raven" remained so popular? OR What does Sexton mean in "Her Kind" when she says, "I have been her kind."
J15: Do you consider Harjo’s “Santa Fe” to be poetry? Why or why not?
J16: What is Eavan Boland saying about history in "That the Science of Cartography is Limited"?
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