Discussion features readings in multicultural poetry, includingselected texts from the traditions ofNative-American poetry.
General instructions:Please choose ONE poem from each category/forum and provide at leastone post for each of your selected poems. Additionally, cover at least one poetic devicein one of your posts/poems. You’re welcome to cover more than two poems and/or to compare/contrast two texts in a single post, as long asyou participate in all three mini-forums.
This forum covers the following texts:
Paula Gunn Allen, “Pocahontas to Her English Husband, John Rolfe” (Attached below)
Susan Deer Cloud, “Her Pocahontas”(Attached below)
In your post, identify your featured text(s) by title (or a shortenedversion thereof) in the subject line: e.g. “Pocahontas to Her EnglishHusband”¦.” Please be sure to provide concrete textual evidence (linenumbers for in-text poetry citations in MLA style).
Suggested topics for reading and writing are provided in the study guides in the weekly module. (Attached below)
The discussion forum is open-ended, so you may determine your topics and approaches, as long as you cover at least one poetic device in at least one poem. How does this literary technique contribute to the overall presentation and meaning of the poem?
Some poetic elements to consider: the speaker of the poem; the actionof the poem; setting; form/structure (most of these modern poems arefree verse or open-form poetry); repetition and parallelism; tone and/ordiction (style); rhyme; rhythm/meter; sound and rhythm devices likealliteration, assonance, onomatopoeia, etc.; syntax/word order andpunctuation; imagery; and types of figurative language: imagery,allusion, metaphor/simile, symbolism, personification, irony, hyperbole,synecdoche, and so on.
Since this is our first foray into reading and writing about poetry,please review “Poetry Terminology” and “Analyzing Poetry” under theHandouts and Resources Module.(Attached Below)
Cover at least one poem for a minimum of 1 post in this forum and reply to one of your fellow classmates post.