"Pitcher" by Robert Francis, other than the obvious repetition tone doesn't focus to much on a specific literary technique but instead it focuses more on uncovering the techniques and goal of a pitcher in baseball. This poem also compares the goals of a baseball pitcher to maybe a quarterback who instead would try to throw the ball, with intentions of it being understood and easily "read". This poem openly expresses the "hidden methods" that may not be seen or understood my a member of the audience.
Francis uses repetition on tone and "line meaning", in order to allow the reader to understand what exactly he is explaining. He also breaks the description of the pitch up into small sections to show the actual importance and thought behind what the pitcher is actually trying to accomplish.
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
Sunday, February 13, 2011
Claire Barbour: Immigrants by Pat Mora
-In order to capture the true "American Life" Pat Mora uses stereotypical phrases dealing with the American way of life such as" Blonde dolls that blink blue", "hot dogs and apple pie." By doing this he captures the ideas that immigrants have about America, and also their desires to be one of Americas citizens. He creates a stressful tone by conveying their everyday stresses for their children to be looked at as every day American children.
-Mora conveys the immigrants desires by putting us in their head and showing wat they see when they think of America. Therefore stereotypes concerning this topic, allowed the reader to feel what exactly it was that the immigrants expected when they moved to America.
Sunday, February 6, 2011
-This poem by Louise Gluck "Life is a nice Place", has a very ironic tone. Gluck describes this lovely place knows as life and describes the music, people and love. He has the reader believing that this would indeed be a nice place to be, but when the reader discovers how the the first and final lines of the poem fit together they automatically realize his sarcasm. "Life is a nice place.../ to visit. But I wouldn't live there." The reader then can tell that for Gluck live is more suitable as a vacation rather that a lifestyle.
-Gluck creates irony in the poem by placing certain lines in strategic places. So therefore in order to mock the strategy he uses I would place the lines in my poem in a place that would create irony (or whatever other tone I was trying to create) without actually making the diction ironic, but instead almost disputing what I had said earlier in the poem.
-Gluck creates irony in the poem by placing certain lines in strategic places. So therefore in order to mock the strategy he uses I would place the lines in my poem in a place that would create irony (or whatever other tone I was trying to create) without actually making the diction ironic, but instead almost disputing what I had said earlier in the poem.
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