ELEMENTS AND CHARACTERISTICS OF POETRY
Elements of Poetry
- SOUND
- Persona - refers to the voice a writer creates to tell a story to define the speaker in a poem.
- Rhyme - Words that end with similar sounds. Usually at the end of a line of the poem.
- Rhyming - Two lines of a poem together with the same rhythm.
- Rhythm - A pattern created with sounds: hard - soft, long - short, bouncy, quiet - loud, weak - strong.
- Cadence - a rhythmic change in the inflection of sounds from words being spoken. Sometimes referred to as the flow of words
- Rhyming Scheme - The pattern of arrangement of the rhymes in a poem.
- SENSE
- Diction - The selection of specific words
- Meaning - The physical and grammatical arrangement of words, or the use of figurative language enhanced by recalling memories of related experiences in the reader or listener or words combined in a mixture that communicates both a literal and suggested meaning. (denotation and connotation)
> Denotation - the dictionary and literal meaning of a word
> Connotation - the emotional or feeling behind the word
- Story - A narrative or a story in a verse
- Tone - The atmosphere in the poem. It is the attitude of the writer to the subject matter of the work
- Theme - Overall central theme or idea within where one can extract valuable lessons to learn or embrace.
- SIGHT
- Images/Imagery - The mental pictures the poet creates through descriptive language.
- Verse - A line of a poem, or a group of lines within a long poem.
- Form - The arrangement of words, lines, verses, rhymes, and other features
- Stanza - group of lines in a poem.
- Meter - a rhythm that continuously repeats a single basic pattern.
- Couplet - a part of a poem with similar rhythm and rhyme that will usually repeat later in the poem.
Checklist for Analyzing Poetry
- Who is the speaker?
- Who is the speakerâs audience?
- What is the poemâs theme?
- What is the poemâs structure?
- How is the poem organized?
- What is the poemâs rhyme scheme?
- Do the lines end with a completion of a thought or closed punctuation?
- How would you characterize the poemâs language or diction?
- What images are developed in the poem
- Is there any evidence of repetition, alliteration, and/or other sound effects in the poem?
- Is there any significance to the placements of words in the poem?
- Is there any significance to the poemâs punctuation or the capitalization and spelling of words?
âLife is a matter of choices, and every choice you make makes you.â - John C. Maxwell
âLife is about choices. Some we regret, some weâre proud of, some will haunt us forever. The message: We are what we chose to be.â - Graham Brown
âThe Road Not Takenâ - Robert Frost
âColourâ - Oglala Lakota
âFirst a Poem Must Be Magicalâ - Jose Garcia Villa
âA Corner In My Soulâ - Saju Abraham
âA Prayer From The Wombâ - Saju Abraham
âThe Rhodoraâ - Ralph Waldo Emerson
âSlow Danceâ - David L. Weatherhood
INTRODUCTION TO 21ST CENTURY WORLD LITERATURE
Time: the year 2001 marked the beginning of the 21st century.
- All literary works produced from that time and the years henceforth until today are in the 21st century world literature.
- From year 200 - 2100
Characteristics: depicts a dystopian world
- Emotional and social constructs themes arise
- Triumph of the human spirit continues
- âTo be someone other than yourself is at the core of humanity, the essence of compassion, and it is the beginning of morality.â - McEwan
- Digital Revolution:
- Common Harsh Reality: Social Injustices
- Age of information
- The medium is the message
- The how is more important than the what
- Electronic literature arises: the growth of trimedia literature, hypertext literature, microblog, fan fiction, e-books.
New Genres Of 21st Century World Literature
Genres of Writing:
- Fiction
- Non Fiction
- Poetry
- Prose
- Drama
- Prose Poetry
- Speculative Fiction - highlights imagination. An example is Simonâs Replica
- Graphic Novel - manga, comics, manhwa, manhua
- Doodle Fiction - comics (illustration without words)
- Young Adult Literature -
- Young Adult: 16-25 years old
- Teen Fiction: 10-15 years old
Influences and trend of the 21st century:
- Postmodernism - philosophical postmodern perspective, skeptical (doubtful, confuse)
- follow s the concept of Ideology: the meaning of the words is to be determined by the readers not the authors
- Transrealism - rejects artificial construction of meaning
- Incorporates fantastic elements used in sci-fi
- interpretation is more important than the text itself
- used for plausible setting
- rejects artificial construction of meaning
- incorporates fantastic elements used in science fiction
- describes immediate from a natural setting
ILONGGO LITERATURE
How The Diversity Unfolded
- The mother language of West Visayas and thus, of Hiligaynon literature is Kinaray-a
- Kinaray-a was the language of the 10 datus from Borneo
- Two major languages of the West Visayas, Hiligaynon and Aklanon, grew from kinaray-a
The Oral Tradition of Hiligaynon Literature Incliudes:
- Binalaybay (poem)
- Paktakon (riddle)
- Hurubaton (proverb)
- Ili-ili (lullaby)
- Balitaw (love song)
- Ambahan (long song)
- Asoy (tale)
- Siday (poetic duel)
- Folk songs are usually accomplished by strings, percussion, or wind instruments.
- Prominent Panay epics (also known as âSugidonâ) are the âLabaw Donggonâ and the âHinilawodâ
- The invention of the âC`1234566omposoâ, a ballad sung as a tribute to a folk hero or a milestone event in a community.
- âBordonâ was commonly played during vigils for the dead, wherein the loser of this popular game would then have to recite a quatrain called the âLuwaâ
- Hiligaynon literature incorporated the âFlores De Mayoâ, a devotional prayer sung to the Virgin Mary during the month of May
- In honor of saints during feast celebrations, poets perform an ode called âPagdayawâ as a tribute to the fiesta queen.
Mariano Perfecto
- Bicolano by birth
- Established the âimprenta La Panayanaâ in Iloilo City around the 1800s
- Responsible for the publishing of the widely popular âAlamanake Panayanhonâ which contained âpassionâ novenas, and works by early Hiligaynon writers.
The Hiligaynon tradition came to include the âZarzuelaâ , the âMoro-Moroâ, and the âCorridoâ
A play called âRodrigo de Villasâ was the most popular corrido from West Visayas during this time.
The arrival of the Americans ushered in a Golden Age of Hiligaynon Literature.
- Exemplary Poets Included:
- Delfin Gumban
- Flavio Zaragoza Cano
- Santiago Alv. Mulatom
- Serapion Torre
- Angel Magahum
- Ramon L. Musones
- Magdalena Jalandoni
- Jose Ma. Ingalla
- Jose Ma. Nava
- Miguela Montelibano
- Rosendo Mejica - responsible for the establishment of Makinaugalingon Press in Iloilo Cit.
- Augurio Abeto
- Abe Gonzales
Golden Age of Hiligaynon Literature
- Rosendo Mejica - responsible for the establishment of Makinaugalingon Press in Iloilo City
- Liwayway Publications in Manila came up with âHiligaynonâ magazine, which allowed the Hiligaynon voice to be heard in the nationâs capital and beyond.
The momentum was carried into the Post-War Period:
- Yuhum magazine (La Defensa Press)
- Kasanag (Disolo Publications)
- Novelists like Jose E. Yap, and Conrado Norada kept Hiligaynon fiction strong.
Other prominent writers that time include:
- Isabelo Sobrevega
- Hernando Siscar
- Ramon L. Muzones
- Abe Gonzales
- Santiago Alv. Mulato
- Hiligaynon fiction grew even more in subsequent decadews like irony and chracterization
- The novel remained popular while the short story gained its own headway
- In the 1960s, Mario L. Villaret, Nilo P. Pamanog, Romeo Garganera, Ismaelita Floro-Luza, and Ma. Luisa Defante Gibraltar emerged.
- During the administration of Corazon Aquino, campus writing in Kinaray-a was heavily promoted, and prominence in multilingual writing rose in the Hiligaynon region.
- In 1997, Palanca Awards began to recognize exemplary Hiligaynon short stories
âNagkakanta Ako Kang Paglaumâ - Genevieve L. Asenjo
WORLD LITERATURE: ASIAN LITERATURE
- Why do we need to study World/Asian Literature? - To understand and appreciate the different culture of other countries in the world, and their diversity.
- What is the purpose of World/Asian Liteature - To appreciate oneâs diversity
HOW THE GROWTH OCCURED
- The literary traditions of Asia, the Largest Continent on the planet, are colossal in terms of scope and length of existence
- East Asia is a good place to start the literary exploration.
CHINA
- Has the most dominant literature
- Influenced the Japanese and Korean Literature
- One of the worldâs cradles of civilization
- Mesopotamia - where the civilization started
- Beliefs: Hinduism, Buddhism, Taoism, Confusianism
- The chinese language was preserved for over 3,000 years
- Mandarin was there first language
- Has had an unbroken literary tradition that started back in the 14th century BCE
- The unfathomable longevity was achieved in the large part through the preservation of Chinese language across 3,000 years.
- Retained the reputation of keeping the fundamentals of its identity intact.
- The finest Chinese literature was the Tang Dynasty (618-907), when poets like Tu Fu, Li Po, and Wang Wei created landmark works unrivalled elsewhere in the world.
- Four sections of Chinese Literature:
- Masters of Literature
- Popular Literature Classics
- Textbooks of Literature and Papers
- Journals of Literature
- THEME: Culture, Philosophy, and History
- Literature is important to exhibit the countryâs civilization and charm.
- Pre-Classical Period - influenced by oral traditions of different social and professional provenance
- Classical Period - Confucius or Kung Fu-Tzu became prominent, writer, philosopher, and a teacher
- Modern Literature - late Qing was a period of intellectual ferment sparked by sense of national crisis
JAPAN
- Evidently influeced by Chinese language and Chinese literature
- Japanese tradition created its unique legacy
- Haiku was the world-renowned poetic genre
- Diverse forms of theater such as the Noh and the Kabuki also flourished
- Cultural identity: simple yet complex, imperfect yet abounding with beauty
- Kabuki - most prominent theater play in Japan
- Where pantomime started
- KA - song
- BU -dance
- KI - skill
- Haiku - has a syllabic pattern of 5-7-5 in which words are kept simple that deals with themes about nature
- Japaneseâ way to cope up from the suicide thoughts and suicidal cases in Japan is to make and create haiku
- Tanka - has five syllabic units consisting 5-7-5-7-7 pattern
- in the Philippines, we have Tanaga
Three Types of Drama
- Noh
- Kabuki
- Jouri
Chikamatsu Monzaemon - Japanâs Shakespeare
Jippensha Ikku - Japanâs Mark Twain
Mangaka - artist who makes Manga
KOREA
- Chinaâs cultural dominance in the region became even more evident when Korean poets wrote poetry in Chinese as early as the 4th Century CE
- Hangul was developed in the 15th century
- Follows: Confusianism, Buddhism, Taoism
SOUTH ASIA: india, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Iran, Maldives, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Afghanistan
- India is the clear cultural giant
- The roots of indian literature may be traced to the hall mark of Hindu writings, such as Veda, Brahmanas, and the Upanishads
- The Veda was written in the Sanskrit Language
- The British colonization of subsequent centuries meant that English literature would emerge as a key influenceâ an influence that pervades up to the present day
INDIA
- Brahmanas - commentaries on rituals, ceremonies, and sacrifices
- Upanishads - text on meditation, philosophy and spiritual knowledge
- Buddhism, Jainism
- Panchatantra - five books: oldest known collection of Indian Fables
- Aesop and Fontaine Fables
- Mahabharata âThe Great Tale of the Descendants of Bharataâ
- Ramayan âLife of Ramaâ
- The two important classical epics of India: Mahabharata and Ramayan
CENTRAL ASIA: Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tibet, and Nepal
- Is political in culture
- Central asian literature were the Tsarist and Soviet regimes that eanated from what is now Russia
- Influenced by Russia
- Main theme: Politics
MIDDLE EAST: Bahrain, Iran, iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman
- The Arabic Literary Tradition Flourished
- Islam, a foundation of culture in the new era, was an essential component
- As literature in Arabic language grew, it began to influence cultures that the Arabian people came into contact with.
- These include the Persian, Byzantine, and Andalusian traditions
- Islamic Religion played a major role in the development of Arabic Literature
- The Quâran is a biblical scripture which served as the finest piece of literary work written in their own language.
- Hebrew Literature
- Coming of Jewish tradition before and after the coming of Christ
SOUTHEAST ASIA: Brunei, Burma, Cambodia, Timor-Leste, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam
- Thailand is the only country in Southeast Asia/Asia that was not colonized by a foreign country
- In Burma, literature has been heavily influenced by the Buddhist, Thai, and English cultures
- Thailand experienced Two Golden Eras of literature: (1) The Era of King Narai, 1657-1688; (2) The rule of King Rama II, 1809-1824
- Malaysia and Indonesia owe their literary traditions in large part to the Sanskrit language and the isla culture
CONTEMPORARY TIMES: A SNAPSHOT
CHINA
- In Modern Times, Chinese writers have remained prolific
- Chinese literature tradition is nevertheless prosperous
- Notable names include Mo Yan, a fictionist who won the 2012 Nobel Prize for Literature
- Remarkable too were the novels of Yu Hua, Wang Shuo, and Shi Tiesheng; and the stories of Gao Xiaosheng, Wang Zengqi, and Zhang Chenzi
JAPAN
- Ever since the Meiji restoration in the 19th century, Western influences have permeated Japanese literature
- Manifestations of this include the pioneering of modern Japanese novels, translations of poetry from the West, and reinventions of traditional Jpaanese poetic forms like Tanka and the haiku
- In The Genre Of Drama, Playwrights Like Abe Kobo and Mishima Yukio became notable for creating world- renowned works
KOREA
- Korean war has created an inedible mark on Korean literature
- Themes of alienation, conscience, and disintegration have been presented in Korean works since the 1950s
- Self-Identity has also become a strong theme in korean literature such as poems, novels, and plays, well into the 20th century
INDIA
- India gained independence in the 2oth century
- Several indian writers became highly accomplished internationally acclaimed names
- These include Rabindranath Tagore (Nobel Prize Winner), Prem Chand, Raja Rao, and R.K. Narayan
CENTRAL ASIA
- Russia continue to influence the literature of central asia
- During the era of Sovet Union, Abdullah Qadiriy produced pioneering novels in the Uzbek Language and Mukhtar Auez-uli became noteworthy writer in Kazakh
- In the 20th century, Chingiz Aytmatov became a successful writer in the Russian Language
ARABIC TRADITION
- The issue of freedom of expression has become problematic for Arabic writers in the 21st century
- Tension between religious and secular movementsâa conflict that also impacts the way that Arabic writers produce their texts
SOUTHEAST ASIA
- Colonization and postcolonial experiences were evident in Burmese works in the 20th century to this day
- In Thailand, the influence of western literature became truly pronounced after the country came into contact with the West during the WORLD WAR II
- Writers in Malaysia and Indonesia developed very distinct voices when the new Malay and Indonesian languages were born