How to Read a Poem

How do you read a poem? Here are the top 7 tips on how to effectively read poetry:

  1. Dispell the idea that reading poetry will drastically change your life (fun fact: it doesn’t). People are always changing, so don’t try and make that change occur through analyzing the words of others.
  2. Even if it’s not entirely meant to be a spoken-word poem, READ IT OUT LOUD. This will help you get a feel for the poem that you are reading, as well as giving you a pace for reading it.
  3. Different kinds of poems do exist, so not all of them will come easily to your understanding. So, instead of just giving up on it, try and find a way to read it that makes sense to you.
  4. Don’t just move on from it. Stick it out and finish reading the poem you are on (without rushing), before moving on to another poem, or activity.
  5. Remember, you can’t paraphrase a poem, since that changes the meaning of the words. Even if it’s a pain, just quote it.
  6. Don’t always make a connection between the poet and the poem. The poet always wears a mask (even unconsciously), so maintaining that the speaker and the poets are one and the same takes away from the texts’ imaginative force.
  7. Finally, don’t search for the meaning of a poem. You are the reader, its meaning is up to you

 

Source:

Yakich, Mark. “The Atlantic.” The Atlantic, theatlantic, 2 Nov. 2014, www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2014/11/how-to-read-poetry-a-step-by-step-guide/380657/. Accessed 14 Apr. 2021.

 

Fahrenheit 451 – Mildred Montag

The character of Mildred Montag in Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 is the perfect Archetypal fit of a Dystopian Citizen. Image result for fahrenheit 451This is because she follows the government’s/society’s guidelines without questions, even though the laws are quite obviously flawed. In the book, Mildred also suffers from the societal obsession with technology, even trying to push her husband into buying a third TV: “It’s really fun. It’ll be even more fun when we can afford to have the fourth wall installed. How long you figure before we save up and get the fourth wall torn out and a fourth wall TV put in? it’s only two thousand dollars.” (Pg. 18). This quotation exhibits how she is willing to sacrifice a good chunk of her husband’s income for leisure instead of purchasing necessities. Because of input from the government and the censorship of all books, Mildred has morphed into the perfect brainwashed citizen of the society.

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Bradbury, Ray. Fahrenheit 451. Amsterdam, Lebowski Publishers, 2017.

Protagonist – Brainstorm

 

Name of character Gaia MacDermot
What does your protagonist want? At the beginning of the story, it is just to seek out what has been hidden from her and the rest of the population but then morphs into a struggle to educate the public and “level the playing ground” with the government.
What obstacles stand in your protagonist’s way? The natural world as well as the government of her society. The government officials of the society are leeching off of a world that the rest of the population don’t know about, meaning that they have more recourses.
Specific Characteristics of your protagonist (appearance, special skills/abilities, knowledge) Around 5’7, with brown hair (in dreadlocks) and brown eyes, with noticeable Hispanic heritage. Is exceptionally strong for her age (17), though not superhumanly so. She wears a light blue fur Jacket and brown hide pants, with heavy boots and gloves. She also carries a small oxygen tank around at all times, which is a regulation item for the people in her society.

This is an example of the hair for the character:

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