Figurative Language in literary and examples
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Transcript of Figurative Language in literary and examples
FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE I: SIMILE, METAPHOR, PERSONIFICATION, APOSTROPHE, METONYMYI.Figurative language
A.Figurative language is language which says
1.less than what you mean, or
2.more than what you mean, or
3.the opposite of what you mean, or
4.something other than what you mean.
B.We use figurative speech because
1.it communicates our meaning more vividly and forcefully than literal language
2.it also says more--adds dimension (depth)
C.Definition of Figure of Speech ("trope": general term for any use of figurative images)
1.General Definition:
a. any way of saying something other than the normal (literal) wayb. some rhetoreticians have classified as many as 250 different tropes
2.For our purposes:
a. a way of saying one thing and meaning another (figurative language is language that is meant not to be taken literally)b. we will focus on just a few
II.Metaphor and Simile
A.Both are used as a means of comparing things that are essentially unlike
B.Distinction between the two:
1. Simile is a comparison that is expressed (explicit) by use of some word or phrase: like, as, than, similar to, resembles, or seems
2. Metaphor is a comparison that is implied; the figurative term is substituted for or identified with the literal term
C.Both metaphor and simile speak of one thing (often an abstraction) in terms of something else (usually something concrete and hence sensory). The comparison stated or implied can be represented as a kind of equation if we take the equals sign (=) to mean "resembles." The literal term of the comparison is the subject the poet is basically concerned with. The figurative term is the term in which the poet is "explaining" or picturing his basic subject. Thus
Literal Term Often abstract; Unfamiliar to reader =Figurative Term Usually concrete; Familiar to reader
Example: When in Act I, Scene 2 of Shakespeare's Hamlet, Hamlet says "O God! God! / How weary, stale, flat and unprofitable / Seem to me all the uses of this world! / Fie on't! ah fie! 'tis an unweeded garden / That grows to seed," we can explain the metaphor as so:
human experience ("this world") defined by basic physical drives ="an unweeded garden"
Langton Hughes Harlem (727)2. What specific denotation has the word dream? One of its denotations is a condition or achievement that is longed for, or an aspiration.Since the poem does not reveal the contents of the dream, the poem is general in its implication.What happens to our understanding of it on learning that its author was a black American? The knowledge that the poet was a black American living in Harlem during the first half of the 20th century helps us understand that the "dream deferred" is specifically the hoped for but delayed realization of full and equal participation of black Americans with whites in the political and economic freedoms supposedly guaranteed by the Constitution. The metaphorical comparison of black frustration to a bomb (metonymically representing a race riot or even armed revolution) is therefore appropriately placed in the tic position.
QUESTIONS.
Of the six images, five are similes. Which is a metaphor? Discussion
Comment on its position and its effectiveness.Discussion
Simile (like, as, seems, etc.)Literal=Figurative
Named Term=Named Term
a dream deferred [put off; postponed] =a raisin in the sun drying up (2-3)
a dream deferred [put off; postponed] =a sore festering and then running (4-5)
a dream deferred [put off; postponed] =rotten meat stinking (6)
a dream deferred [put off; postponed] =a syrupy sweet crusting and sugaring over ((7-8)
a dream deferred [put off; postponed] a heavy load sagging (9-10)
Metaphor (comparison implied)
a dream deferred [put off; postponed] a bomb exploding (11)
D.Four forms of metaphor:
We need carefully to observe how the poet treats the two parts (literal and figurative) of the comparison.
To allow the figurative term to make its full impression, we need to cooperate with the poet by perceiving all the implications suggested by it;
we need also to notice how he handles the literal term.
The distinction in the four forms of metaphor is whether the literal and figurative terms are respectively named.
First Form: Both figurative and literal terms are named
In "The widow's Lament in Springtime" (693)Literal term namedFigurative term named
sorrow=yard
Second Form: Literal named and figurative is implied
In "Harlem" Literal term namedFigurative term implied
deferred dream=bomb exploding
Application: Robert Frost, "Bereft"
1Describe the situation precisely. What time of day and year is it? Where is the speaker? What is happening to the weather? Discussion
2To what are the leaves in lines 9-10 compared? Discussion
3The word "hissed" (9) is onomatopoetic [use of words that sound like what they mean] How is its effect reinforced in the lines following? Discussion
4Though lines 9-10 present the clearest example of the second form of metaphor, there are others. To what is the wind ("it") compared in line 3? Why is the door (4) "restive" and what does this do (figuratively) to the door? To what is the speaker's "life" compared (15)? Discussion
5What is the tone of the poem? How reassuring is the last line? Discussion
Second form in "Bereft"Literal named=figurative (implied)
leaves=(snake)
Third Form: Literal implied, figurative named
Fourth Form: Literal implied, figurative implied
Application: Emily Dickinson, "It sifts from leaden sieves"
1This poem consists essentially of a series of metaphors having the same literal term identified only as "It." What is "It"? Discussion
2In several of these metaphors the figurative term is named--"alabaster wool" (3), "fleeces" (11), "celestial veil" (12). Most of these are metaphors of the third form in which only the figurative term is named. In two of them, however, the figurative term as well as the literal term is left unnamed (metaphors of the fourth form). To what is "It" compared in lines 1-2? In lines 17-18? Discussion
3Comment on the additional metaphorical expressions or complications contained in "leaden sieves" (1), "alabaster wool" (3), "even face" (5), "unbroken forehead" (7), "a summer's empty room" (14), "artisans" (19). Discussion
Third Form metaphors in "It Sifts from Leaden Sieves"literal (implied)figurative named
(2) It (snow)=alabaster wool
(11) (snow)=fleeces
(12) (snow)=celestial veil
Fourth Form metaphors in "It Sifts from Leaden Sieves" Literal (implied)figurative (implied)
(1-2) (snow)=(flour) falling from leaden sieves
(17-18) (snow)=(lace or cloth) around the wrist and ankles
E.The fourth form is rare; Emily Dickinson's "I like to see it lap the miles" (911) is an extended example--a train is compared to a horse though neither is named:
Literal (implied)=figurative (implied)
(train)=(horse)
laps miles and valleys up;feeds [takes water] itself at tanks; peers [with its head- lights] into shanties by the road; hoots [with its whistle], is punctual; and stops at its stable [station or roundhouse]laps, licks, feeds, steps, peers, has ribs, crawls, complains, chases itself, neighs, and stops at a stable
IIIPersonification--giving the attributes of a human to an animal, object, or concept
A.Actually is a subtype of metaphor: an implied comparison in which the vehicle/ figurative term is a human
B.Examples:
"Mirror" by Sylvia Plath (692-93)--the mirror speaks and thinks [object]"To Autumn" by John Keats (724-25)--describes autumn as a harvester (season)
C.Difference in degree to which we are asked to actually visualize the literal term in human form
1In Keat's comparison, we are asked to make a complete identification of autumn with a human
2In Plath's, though the mirror speaks and thinks, we continue to visualize it as a mirror
3In Frost' "Bereft", the "restive" door remains in appearance a door tugged by the wind
4In Browning's reference to "startled little waves" barely perceptible, should not think of waves in human form or having human emotions
*** NOTE: Be sure to pay attention to the comment at the top of page 732 concerning how various figures of speech blend into each other
D.Application--Personification in Anne Bradstreet's The Author to Her Book Bradstreet's book The Tenth Muse was published in 1650 without her permission.
2The poem is an extended personification addressing her book as a child. What similarities does the speaker find between a child and a book of poems? What does she plan to do now that her child has been put on public display?Discussion
3.Trace the developing attitudes of the speaker toward the child/book. Why does she instruct the child to deny it has a father? Discussion
E.Application--Personification in Maya Angelous The Telephone
1.Most home telephones were black before the innovation of a variety of "designer colors. What are the connotations of the colors to lines 1-3? Discussion
2.Line 4 introduces a simile. Explain how a telephone might resemble a "spinstered aunt" (5). What would such an aunt have to do with the speaker's needs / and need" (6-7)? Discussion
3.Beginning in line 8, the simile is developed into a personification. To what is the telephone compared? How are its activities a development of the Aunt" simile? Be sure you understand the denotation of "tats" and "crocheting (5), "hemming (12), "darning (14), and "needle sound" (21). Discussion
4.How does the last line provide a conclusion to the poem? Discussion
IVApostrophe--addressing someone absent, dead, or something nonhuman as if that person or thing were present and alive and could reply
A.Examples:
1In A. E. Houseman's "To an Athlete Dying Young" (1060), the speaker apostrophizes a dead runner
2In William Blake's "The Tiger" (1030), the poet apostrophizes a tiger
3In Keat's "To Autumn" (783), the poet apostrophizes as well as personifies the season.
B.Personification and apostrophe
1Give immediacy and life to language
2But do not require great imaginative power (particularly apostrophe) and can be found even in mediocre and bad poetry
3We need to distinguish their effective use and their merely conventional use
Application: "Bright Star," John Keats
1The speaker tongs to be as "steadfast" (1) as the star, yet lines 2-8 express his wish to be unlike the star in important ways. What are the qualities of the star that he would not want to emulate? Why would these be wrong for him in his situation? Discussion
2Explore the apparent contradictions in the phrase "sweet unrest" (12). How do they anticipate the final line? Discussion
3The speaker repeats "still" (13). What relevant denotations does the word evoke, and how does the repetition add intensity and meaning to this apostrophe? Discussion
4Why is an apostrophe more effective here than a description of the star that does not address it? Discussion
V.Synecdoche (use of part for the whole) and Metonymy (use of something closely related for the thing actually meant)
A.Both substitute some significant detail or aspect of an experience for the experience itself
B.Examples
1metonymy--Randall (645): "those guns will fire" subbed for "the police will fire the guns"
2In Kay (678), "catalogues of domes" subbed for enough domed buildings to fill a catalogue
3In A. E. Houseman's "Terrence, This Is Stupid Stuff" (649),
a.synecdoche: "Malt does more than Milton can / to justify God's way to man," malt subbed for beer or ale;
b.metonymy: Look into the pewter pot / to see the world as the world is not,"
(1) pot subbed for ale(2) world subbed for human life and the conditions under which it is lived
4In Robert Frost's "Out, Out--" (773) metonymy: held up hand "as if to keep / the life from spilling," life subbed for blood
C.Synecdoches and metonymies gain vividness, meaning, or compactness
D.Dead vs. fresh figures of speech
1like many other figures, some synecdoches and metonymies may have become embedded in our language and no longer strike us as being fresh
"redhead" for red-haired person"hands" for manual laborers"tongues" for languages"dead metaphors" for all dead (trite or stale, hence not fresh or alive) tropes
2Since synecdoche and metonymy are so similar, we will refer to both figures as Metonymy: any trope in which a part or something closely related is substituted for the thing literally meant
VISummary--figurative language (tropes) is often more effective than direct literal) language
A.Figurative language affords us imaginative pleasure.
B.Figurative language adds imagery to verse, makes the abstract concrete, makes poetry more sensusous
C.Figurative language adds emotional intensity to what is otherwise a merely informative statement and conveys an attitude along with the statement
D.Figurative language compacts language, says much in few words
1Example: excerpt from Macbeth (780) in which Shakespeare compares life to a candle
a. it begins and ends in darknessb. while it burns, it gives off light and energy, is active and colorfulc. it gradually consumes itself, gets shorter and shorterd. it can be snuffed out at any momente. it is brief at best, burning for only a short duration
2Good use of figurative language is capable of expressing n compact metaphorical terms certain truths about life that might require dozens of words to state in literal terms.
E.When interpreting figurative language, one always risks misinterpretation, but it is a risk well worth taking, for the figurative language will provide depth and pleasure to our understanding poetry
PRACTICE!SimileA simile uses the words like or as to compare one object or idea with another to suggest they are alike.Example: busy as a beeMetaphorThe metaphor states a fact or draws a verbal picture by the use of comparison. A simile would say you are like something; a metaphor is more positive - it says you are something. Example: You are what you eat.PersonificationA figure of speech in which human characteristics are given to an animal or an object.Example: My teddy bear gave me a hug.AlliterationThe repetition of the same initial letter, sound, or group of sounds in a series of words. Alliteration includes tongue twisters.Example: She sells seashells by the seashore.OnomatopoeiaThe use of a word to describe or imitate a natural sound or the sound made by an object or an action.Example: snap crackle pop HyperboleAn exaggeration that is so dramatic that no one would believe the statement is true. Tall tales are hyperboles.Example: He was so hungry, he ate that whole cornfield for lunch, stalks and all.IdiomsAccording to Webster's Dictionary, an idiom is defined as: peculiar to itself either grammatically (as no, it wasn't me) or in having a meaning that cannot be derived from the conjoined meanings of its elements.Example: Monday week for "the Monday a week after next Monday"ClichsA clich is an expression that has been used so often that it has become trite and sometimes boring.Example: Many hands make light work.SIMILE: An explicit comparison (using like or as): "Her lips are like roses." METAPHOR: A word or phrase denoting one kind of object or idea used in place of another to suggest a likeness or analogy between them ("the ship ploughs the sea.") A metaphor is generally an implicit comparison (doesn't use like or as): "Her lips are roses." SYNECDOCHE: substituting a part for a whole or a whole for a part. "Fifty sail" for "fifty ships"; "the smiling year" for spring. METONYMY: substituting the name of something for its attribute or whatever it is associated with ("crown" for king). PERIPHRASIS: substituting a descriptive phrase, made up of a concrete adjective and abstract noun, for a precise word: "fringed curtains of thine eye" (= eyelashes). PERSONIFICATION: attributing animation to something inanimate ("a grieving nation"); treating a thing or abstract quality as though it were a person. OXYMORON: deliberate combination of seemingly contradictory words ("helpful bureaucrat"; "bittersweet").