Poetry: Re-Reading Strategies and Questions
Exploring the text
- Read the poem slowly and "outloud" several times
- Look up any words you are unsure about, noting different
meanings, synonyms, antonyms, linguistic roots as relevant.
- allusions you don't know
(such as references to classical mythology or the Bible)
- Note any images in the poem and experience them in sensory
as well as intellectual terms
Exploring patterns
- What is the metrical pattern(s) of the poem? Where are there
breaks in the pattern?
- Are there any repeated words, phrases, or images?
- Does the poem rhyme? Is it a regular rhyme scheme? Are there
any approximate or off-rhymes?
Questioning the text
- Where are the gaps or ambiguities of syntax or meaning in
the poem?
- Are there any hints of a subtext which conflicts or
questions the surface text?
Exploring the author's and work's general repertoire
- What do you know about the author and the personal
conditions under which he/she wrote? What can you deduce from the poem?
- How do you think age, gender, race, social or financial
status of the author might be relevant to the poem?
- What else do you know about the time, the place, and social,
cultural, and/or political conditions of the work? Which of these might be relevant to
this particular text?
Exploring the author's and work's literary repertoire
- What are the literary conventions and expectations of the
time which affect this work in terms of genre and form, rhetorical strategies, imagery,
meter (or lack of it), etc.
- Do you know any other works by this author? If so, what
patterns and ideas seem to recur in those works that you think may be in this one?
Matching up your own personal, literary, and general
repertoires
- What expectations do you have for the genre and the subject
represented by this poem? How does it meet or disappoint those expectations?
- How do your relevant personal experiences (as recorded in
your free association) match or clash with those suggested in the poem? Are they so strong
that they might block your ability to respond to the poem?
- What differences (from the author) in age, race, gender,
social or political status, etc. might color and shape your reading of this poem?