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AP English Literature and Composition DBQ/Free Response 361 Views
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Description:
AP® English Literature and Composition: DBQ/Free Response. Compare and contrast the perspectives on the subject at hand, as well as the different ways each poet gets their message out there.
Transcript
- 00:04
Here's your shmoop du jour, brought to you by Autumn.
- 00:07
So many bare trees, and not one of them feels an ounce of shame.
- 00:11
Okay, so we have a "dueling Emilys" situation on our hands here...
- 00:14
...one poem by Emily Bronte and one by Emily Dickinson.
- 00:18
They're both about the fall, they're both eight lines long, and neither one especially
Full Transcript
- 00:22
makes you want to throw on a pair of swim trunks and head to the beach.
- 00:25
So... what are we supposed to do?
- 00:27
Well, our instructions are to compare and contrast the perspectives on the subject at
- 00:31
hand -- namely, autumn -- as well as the different ways each poet gets their message out there.
- 00:36
Okay, a starting point would be good...
- 00:38
Before we begin, we really need to delve into each poem and figure out what is significantly
- 00:43
different about the two.
- 00:44
Is one upbeat and the other pessimistic?
- 00:47
Does one approach the subject vaguely and the other paint a clear picture?
- 00:50
Is one pro-September and the other fiercely pro-October?
- 00:54
Okay, so now that we know what the prompt is...
- 00:56
prompting us for...
- 00:57
...it's time for some good old-fashioned analysis.
- 01:00
One of the main things we're looking for here are the literary devices at play.
- 01:04
Both authors have chosen the same topic, but they employ different techniques to portray
- 01:08
unique viewpoints of it.
- 01:10
So... what are those techniques?
- 01:12
No better place to start than with the title.
- 01:15
"Fall, Leaves, Fall" has a trochaic rhythm of stressed and unstressed syllables.
- 01:23
Basically... it slows down the reading of the poem.
- 01:25
For example, you could probably zip your way through a random shopping list pretty quickly.
- 01:28
But if you have to read the lyrics to a song as quickly as possible...
- 01:32
you might have a tougher time.
- 01:34
It's because there's a natural melody, a rhythm, a beat to the language.
- 01:38
WHY would Bronte want to slow down the poem?
- 01:41
Well, probably because she wants the experience to feel something like her depiction of fall.
- 01:46
Slow, sad... and a bit painful.
- 01:49
Not surprising.
- 01:50
The Brontes were never really known for being "uppers."
- 01:53
See: Wuthering Heights.
- 01:55
Autumn has a rhythm as well... as does just about all poetry... but it's a much more familiar,
- 02:01
iambic rhythm, with a typical A-B-A-B rhyme scheme.
- 02:06
It flows from the lips -- or the brain -- with greater ease...
- 02:09
painting an entirely different picture of the season as
- 02:12
one that is soothing... calming... and painless.
- 02:16
Now... what about diction, or word use?
- 02:18
Look at the words Bronte uses: die, decay, drearier...
- 02:23
Aside from them all being "d" words, they're all...
- 02:26
depressing. Oh, look -- another "d" word.
- 02:29
In Autumn, Dickinson instead relies on word choices like "plumper" and "gayer."
- 02:34
No, she's not writing an ode to Bruce Vilanch.
- 02:37
In this instance, she means "gayer" as "happier."
- 02:40
Her word choices make us long for it to be autumn...
- 02:43
because we could use a little gaiety in our lives.
- 02:46
Dickinson also uses personification, which makes the season feel alive...
- 02:50
...while Bronte doesn't. So her depiction of fall is...
- 02:53
lifeless. Just the way she lives it.
- 02:56
Okay, now that we've determined the major differences between viewpoints and technique,
- 02:59
we can form a thesis and get this show on the road.
- 03:02
You could go a couple ways with this... either by focusing on the tone of each poem...
- 03:07
"While the speaker of Dickinson's poem rejoices in the evidence of life in autumn, the speaker
- 03:11
of Bronte's rejoices in the evidence of death"...
- 03:15
...or you could zero in more on the literary device angle...
- 03:18
"The speaker of each poem celebrates autumn, and the authors reveal the speaker's perspectives
- 03:23
through rhythm, diction, and figurative language."
- 03:26
Then, when writing the essay itself, be sure to both compare AND contrast...
- 03:30
...in other words, don't just talk about how the two poems are different and forget to
- 03:34
show how they're also SIMILAR.
- 03:36
Like... they both use the word "rose."
- 03:39
But... probably a little more in-depth than that.
- 03:41
Before you start a-writin'... or maybe after you're done...
- 03:44
check out this sample essay to get an idea of what those AP gurus are looking for...
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