Upload
hannah-fletcher
View
215
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Hosted
By
Mr. Dittmer
100 100
200 200
400 400
300
400
Literary Movements
Famous Authors
LiteraryDevices
Back to Nature
300 300 300
200
400
200
100
500 500 500 500
100
Row 1, Col 1
This mode of thoughtdominates Classical
and Neoclassicalwriting.
Creativity IntuitionReason Emotion
1,2
This unique, Romantic-erapoet was almost entirely
unpublished in her lifetime.
1,3
This device is present when Bryant claims that Nature
“. . . has a voice ofgladness, and a smile.”
1,4
Nature in the classical viewrepresents a set of these:
Which?Symbols Beauties
Laws Mysteries
2,1
Romantics valued thischildish mode of creative thought.
2,2
This author was the father of Transcendentalism and impacted
the careers of Thoreauand Whitman.
2,3
This device is present whenPoe writes, “Brazen bells! /What a tale of terror, now,
their turbulency tells!”
2,4
Walt Whitmanexamined the labors
of this tiny creature andsaw the world from its
perspective.
3,1
This body of works andgroup of Romantic
writers of New Englandqualifies as a literary movement but not as areligion or philosophy.
3,2
He invented the detective storyand even receives credit
for developingthe short story’s form.
3,3
Aside from rhyme,“Baking quick cupcakes took
just two shakes” useswhat sound device?
3,4
This term refers to the effectproduced by great and
frightening objects,often landscapes, thatoverwhelm the viewer.
4,1
This sub-group of the Romanticssaw transcendentalism andsome Romanticism as toopositive and optimistic.
4,2
This author lived alonein the woods in a hand-built cabin.
4,3
The following are examples of what figure of speech?:
“The wheel in the sky keeps on turning.”
“All we are is dust in the wind.”
4,4
While Emerson’s “Self Reliance”focused on the individual’s
practical relationship to society,this other essay found Emerson
“In the woods, … a transparent eyeball …”
5,1
This historical event in Americais closely associated with
the politics of Romanticism.Hint:
freedom; “Beat, Beat, Drums!”
5,2
This author traveled toNew Orleans and decided
to become America’srepresentative poet.
5,3
The “A” sound in “rare and radiant maiden whom the
angels named Lenore” exemplifies thissound device.
200 100
400 200
800 800
300
400
Literary Devices (2)
Authors’ Works Poetic Devices 2
Back to Nature
600 600 300
200
400
400
100
1000 1000 500 500
200
Row 1, Col 1
This term refers to an author’sword choice.
1,2
identify the romantic word that fills the blank:
“. . . The raven the beguilingall my ____ into smiling”
2,1
The following uses whatfigure of speech?:
She flipped when I toldher the news.
2,2
This poem features anavian intruder from the
“Night’s Plutonian shore”
3,1
This poet used first personto speak on behalf of all
Americans.
3,2
Whitman catalogues the American workforce
And exclaims, “I Hear This”
4,1
Hyperbole, metaphor, simile,and personification are
all examples of thistype of language.
4,2
This essay argues that individuals must trust
themselves and follow theirown beliefs.
5,1
When the narrator of “The Raven” changes attitudes
toward the bird, this literarydevice is changing.
5,2
“Thanatopsis” promisesthat this will happen to
your physical body onceit is in the ground.
*hints: “send …mould”OR “rude swain . . .”
In “Self Reliance,” Emerson writes, “A foolish consistency
is the hobgoblin of of little minds, adored by little ______, ______, and ______.”
Name two of the three people/occupations.
FINAL JEOPARDY