A Close Reading Exercise From: http://ocw.mit.edu/NR/rdonlyres/Literature/21L-003Fall2003/E3B42E8B-1A45-447E-938E-7CC3C79F6FC2/0/notes_on_close_reading.pdf What does it mean to read a text closely and analyze it? Why do we do close reading in literary study? The answers to these questions emerge more from the doing than the talking. Briefly‚ close reading is a basic tool for understanding‚ taking pleasure in‚ and communicating one’s interpretation of a literary work. The skills employed
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Close Reading Chapter 13 Pg.264 Briefly explain the context of the passage: The narrator is on a walk after an attempt to get out of the house to clear his mind. He bumps a woman on his way out and she calls the narrator an inappropriate name causing the narrator to speed up. Well thinking about places he could go the narrator reaches a vendor who is selling yams instantly reminding him of the south. The interaction with the vendor causes a sense of homesickness within the narrator. Passage
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position than pose‚ and the poet‚ in principle‚ is higher than the prose writer”( Barnet‚ Cain‚ and Burto (2011). I choose to write about his poem “Love Song” because it really caught my interest and made me really think about what he was trying to tell within the poem. “Love Song” byJ. Alfred Prufrock is about a poet trying to show his love to possibly a close friend that he may have been secretly in love with. My interpretation of the poet’ thoughts and feeling are that I believe Prufrock would go
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"Mending Wall"’ is the opening poem of Frost’s second volume‚ North of Boston. "Mending Wall" dramatizes the emancipating imagination in its playful phase‚ guided surely and confidently by a man who has his world under full control‚ who in his serenity is riding his realities‚ not being shocked by them into traumatic response. "Mending Wall" in the structure of North of Boston suggests‚ in its sharp contrasts to the dark tones of some of the major poems in the volume‚ the psychological necessity
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An Analysis of Robert Frost’s Mending Wall Mending Wall‚ by Robert Frost portrays the routines of two neighbors who are constantly mending the fence‚ or wall‚ that separates their properties. If a stone is missing form the fence‚ you can bet that the two men are out there putting it back together piece by piece. Frost’s description of every detail in this poem is quite interesting‚ very pleasant to read‚ and extremely imaginable. He leaves the reader to decide for himself what deductions
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“A Child’s Christmas in Wales” is the story of a man retelling certain events from the past Christmases in his life. He describes many activities an experiences through his eyes when he was a young boy as if they were miracles‚ some things that many adults overlook and take for granted. “A Christmas Memory” tells the tale of Christmas traditions between a seven year old boy and a grown woman‚ who the boy views as his cousin and best friend. Each of these stories was written with a certain purpose
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Jackson’s “The Lottery” is a prime example of violence and cruelty as a major theme. Also take note in the cruelty of the citizens by their unwillingness to stand up and oppose “The Lottery.” Then‚ in Robert Frost’s Mending Wall‚ one learns of hermetical neighbors who are obsessed with keeping a wall of privacy at their property line. Do “good fences make good neighbors”‚ or are people’s views on “love thy neighbor” truly jaded? Jackson’s fiction is noted for exploring incongruities in everyday life‚ and
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Frost and the mending wall Robert Frost is one of America’s most adored poets‚ and “Mending Wall is one of his most widely held poems. The poem tells the tale of a rock wall which sits between two properties in a countryside. The poem makes us take a look at how we use our walls and boundaries‚ and why we use them the way we do. There is a psychological approach to Robert Frost’s “Mending Wall” literature style. The wall becomes the shining star in this poem‚ it serves as a symbol that unites the
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The Wall in Robert Frost’s “Mending Wall “ As a Symbol of Division The ordinarily mundane takes a thought arousing spin in one of Robert Frost’s earlier works‚ “Mending Wall”. This poem is a striking take on an otherwise commonplace ritual between two farmers in the spring. Because the poem is in blank verse‚ it carries a casual folksy feel throughout‚ contradictory to its deeper message and paradoxical tone. “Good fences make good neighbors.” This line is a paradox when compared with the previous
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Introduction The poems ‘Mending Wall’ and ‘New year’ written by Robert Frost and Edward Thomas are both similar in the idea that they both revolve around encounters. Both poems have many similarities in their presentation and ideas but are also very contrasting. Both have encounters‚ presented in different ways‚ some of the key ideas however remain the same in both. Both poets have very contrasting ideas on what these encounters are and what they represent. Form/Structure The New Year‚
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