Your Literary Response Journal should
convince me that you have read and thought carefully about the
assigned poems. To a limited extent, it is true that a poem means
what the reader thinks it means; you must, however, be able to
explain your interpretation by specific references to the poem.
If your understanding of the poem is "wrong," yet your
journal clearly proves that you read (or misread) the poem, you
may well receive full credit. Your grade is based on what you
have to say and how well you say it -- your personal reaction
to the poem and your explanation of the logic that led to your
interpretation.
Your grade is also based on following directions. I will not
penalize you for grammar and usage errors -- but to receive credit,
you MUST include the following in every LRJ:
- the poem's title in quotation marks
the writer's name
a quotation from the poem -- integrated with your own sentence,
properly punctuated, and commented upon as necessary to show
why you cited that particular passage. No Quote Lumps!
specific references to the poem
careful thought
After you've included the five MUSTs above, you may
choose any of these MAYBEs to guide
your response. You may even choose the same one every time. Consider
the possibilities:
- a general statement of the poem's content
- an analysis of the poet's persona, i.e. the poem's speaker
- a discussion of the title's significance
- a detailed response to a specific line or lines
- a comparison to another poem, song, story, movie
- an examination of poetic techniques used, such as rhyme,
rhythm, simile, metaphor, personification, allusion
- a close analysis of the poet's diction, perhaps noting specific
word choices, or connotation and denotation
- a transformation of the poem to another form, such as a cartoon,
a news story, a letter, a play, a soap opera, a commercial, perhaps
a different form of poetry
- an original poem developing in some way from the assigned
poem
- a paraphrase of the poem
- a discussion of the writer's life and its relevance to the
poem
- a statement relating the poem to your experience or ideas
- an explanation of problems you had in understanding the poem
- your opinion of the poem, good or bad, supported by specific
references from the poem
Length: Approximately 1/2 to 1 page long for each LRJ
Format: Blue or black ink, front side of the paper only
Due: Beginning of the hour in the basket on my desk.
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