1 / 22

Imagery

Imagery. What is it? How is it used to communicate a poet’s meaning?. Warmup. Define visual imagery. Give an example of a visual image. What is imagery?. The use of details to help a reader VISUALIZE a text and create a mental movie Is this imagery? Why or why not?

kiana
Télécharger la présentation

Imagery

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Imagery What is it? How is it used to communicate a poet’s meaning?

  2. Warmup • Define visual imagery. • Give an example of a visual image.

  3. What is imagery? • The use of details to help a reader VISUALIZE a text and create a mental movie • Is this imagery? Why or why not? • They are in the sun and it’s hot. They are brown. There are some round things sticking up. • NOT IMAGERY! We all imagined different things. The description was unclear.

  4. Visual Imagery • Describes sights in a way that we can see them too. • Example: The Red Wheelbarrow William Carlos Williams so much depends upon a red wheel barrow glazed with rain water beside the white chickens.

  5. Visual Imagery • Can you find a second example with a partner? • Look for COLORS, SHAPES, and SIZES • Add it to your foldable and give credit to the author. • Write just the VISUAL images, not the whole poem.

  6. Visual Imagery • Your assignment: • Find one poem with powerful VISUAL imagery and add it to your anthology. • Give to credit to author and title. • Then, write your own that includes at least 3 powerful VISUAL images. • Highlight the images and add the poem to your anthology. • Work on your figurative language list for the anthology.

  7. Auditory Imagery • What does auditory sound like? • In other words: Auditory has to do with hearing. • Allows us to hear the sounds the character or speaker is hearing like we are there in the poem

  8. Auditory Imagery Example by M.L.: Gulls cried as I swam. Waves pounded the shore, My heartbeat pounding inside my chest. Would I make it? Gasps of air as I swallowed, Small puffs of life being slowly squeezed Out. -

  9. Auditory Imagery • Can you find a second example with a partner? • Look for SOUNDS you can hear clearly. • Add it to your foldable and give credit to the author. • Write just the AUDITORY images, not the whole poem.

  10. Auditory Imagery • Your assignment: • Find one poem with powerful AUDITORY imagery and add it to your anthology. • Give to credit to author and title. • Then, write your own that includes at least 3 powerful AUDITORY images. • Highlight the images and add the poem to your anthology. • Work on your figurative language list for the anthology.

  11. Warmup • Define auditory imagery. • Give an example you create. • FYI: Your rubric for the poetry anthology is on my website now. • Class Manager: Pass out imagery foldables and warmup sheets please. Then take attendance.

  12. Tactile Imagery • If something is tacky, it’s sticky to the touch. • In other words: TACTILE means touch imagery • You can feel something like you were the one experiencing it.

  13. Tactile Imagery • Example: Peering into the coffin, I felt the bony hands of my grandfather, As though they were wrapping ‘round My skinny neck as they had done Many times before, and My choking began anew. I had to back away.

  14. Tactile Imagery • Can you find a second example with a partner? • Look for things you can FEEL and TOUCH. • Add it to your foldable and give credit to the author. • Write just the TACTILE images, not the whole poem.

  15. Tactile Imagery • Your assignment: • Find one poem with powerful TACTILE imagery and add it to your anthology. • Give to credit to author and title. • Then, write your own that includes at least 3 powerful TACTILE images. • Highlight the images and add the poem to your anthology. • Work on your figurative language list for the anthology.

  16. Warmup • You DO NOT need your warmup sheets. • Class manager, read the warmup section of the agenda. • All students: Go write down your missing work in your agenda. • Complete both sides of the rhyme scheme page.

  17. Gustatory Imagery • If you use GUSTO, you speak with enthusiasm, so… • In other words: taste imagery • Makes us taste something like we are actually eating or drinking it • Example: She found me roots of relish sweet,   And honey wild, and manna dew, And sure in language strange she said—   “I love thee true.”

  18. Gustatory Imagery • Can you find a second example with a partner? • Look for things you can TASTE. • Add it to your foldable and give credit to the author. • Write just the gustatory images, not the whole poem.

  19. Gustatory Imagery • Your assignment: • Find one poem with powerful GUSTATORY imagery and add it to your anthology. • Give to credit to author and title. • Then, write your own that includes at least 3 powerful GUSTATORY images. • Highlight the images and add the poem to your anthology. • Work on your figurative language list for the anthology. l

  20. Olfactory Imagery • Describes smells in a way that we can smell them too. • Think of a British person saying, “This smells Olful (awful)” • Example: The sour stench of grapes Hung in the air, An oppressive clogging cloud in our nostrils, As through the field we walked.

  21. Olfactory Imagery • Can you find a second example with a partner? • Look for things you can SMELL. • Add it to your foldable and give credit to the author. • Write just the olfactory images, not the whole poem.

  22. Olfactory Imagery • Your assignment: • Find one poem with powerful OLFACTORY imagery and add it to your anthology. • Give to credit to author and title. • Then, write your own that includes at least 3 powerful OLFACTORY images. • Highlight the images and add the poem to your anthology. • Work on your figurative language list for the anthology.

More Related