Breathe in: experience. Breathe out: poetry.
Transcription
Breathe in: experience. Breathe out: poetry.
Experiencing Poetry “Breathe in: experience. Breathe out: poetry.” –Muriel Rukeyser A Year 10 English Unit Group Two: Carly Bretherton Danielle Santangelo Andy Williamson James Butterfield 1 Experiencing Poetry Table of Contents Rationale VELS Consideration 3 5 Section One – Carly Bretherton Poetry: Love me, Love me not Section One Appendices 6 11 Section Two – Danielle Santangelo Morbid Pop: The Concept of Death in Poetry and Culture Section Two Appendices 12 38 Section Three – Andy Williamson Poetry and War Section Three Appendices 58 72 Section Four – James Butterfield Belonging and Dislocation Section Four Appendices 91 105 2 Experiencing Poetry Unit Rationale This Unit has been developed as a resource with which teachers can approach the teaching of poetry at year 10 level. Underlying all of the lessons and activities is a desire to encourage students’ open and honest responses to poetry and, most of all, to foster engagement with the poetic form and an interest in poetry that will remain with the students beyond the end of the unit and, hopefully, into their adult lives. But why should we teach poetry at all? Often regarded by students, and perhaps teachers as well, as unapproachable, inaccessible and socially irrelevant, there are convincing arguments about why the study of poetry should be incorporated into the English curriculum at all levels. For a start, poetry provides an avenue through which students can explore subjects that are relevant to their own worlds, and in the myriad styles and forms that are used in poetry, encourages the reader to think flexibly, appreciating different perspectives and previously unimagined nuances. On a more practical level, studying poetry assists with development of skills that will be relevant to other studies, such as building vocabulary, and lays the foundations for an appreciation of the power of words and how they can be effectively used in a more precise and deliberate manner. Poetry’s efficacy in building literacy skills is not limited to students talented in English, however. The heightened role of the imagination and the freedom to ignore textual conventions such as punctuation and sentence structure provides for many more ways “into” a poem than is offered by a piece of prose. Similarly, students whose first language is not English are able to enjoy and appreciate a short poem, improving reading and vocabulary skills whilst simultaneously building their confidence as an English learner. This unit approaches the teaching of poetry in a somewhat unconventional manner, not by grouping poems by author or era, but by examining them in the context of specific themes: “war”, “death”, “love and friendship” and “belonging and dislocation”. The thematic approach allows comparisons to be drawn between aspects of popular culture and poetry from any era. A focus on a specific , timeless and relevant theme encourages an immediate openness to the role poetry can play in facilitating nuanced and thoughtful responses and reflection. Grouped under a given theme, each lesson has a specific objective that focuses on the learning outcome that students will achieve for that lesson. In this respect, the unit’s method may also differ from traditional classes in which students, under the direction of a teacher, “do” a poem - analysing its meaning, unpicking its structure and highlighting lexical incongruities - all the while referring to the poet’s life experiences that inform the poem. Here, the objective will focus on one particular skill or aspect of one or more texts, and in the activities that follow, students will gain a thorough understanding of this aspect and be able to recognise it and apply it in different contexts. The unit is not meant to be prescriptive and the poems and texts offered herein can be used as a guide to the sort of poems or texts that a teacher might consider to reach the lesson’s objective. Other suggestions are offered in each section, however the process of students discovering poetry that works for them has the potential to greatly enrich the learning experience. 3 Experiencing Poetry Similarly, we have chosen to divide each section or theme into ‘parts’ rather than ‘lessons’. We felt that this approach would provide more flexibility for teachers when designing lessons; allowing you to spend more time on one part and less time on another, according to the strengths of your class, and where you feel they would benefit most. Finally, a note on assessment. While the unit does include opportunities for assessing students’ work, it was felt that an overly rigorous assessment regime has the potential to undermine engagement with and enjoyment of poetry. This unit is designed to provide a counterpoint to the emphasis on functional language and analysis that dominates senior curricula, especially in the VCE. It is, therefore, more suited to flexible and innovative methods of evaluating students’ progress, and suggestions about the form that might take are offered within the individual lesson guides. REFERENCES Tunica, M. (2005). A Passion for Poetry: Practical Approaches to Using Poetry in the Classroom. Newtown: Primary English Teaching Association Wright, T. (2005). How to be a Brilliant English Teacher. Oxon: Routledge. 4 Experiencing Poetry VELS Consideration This unit is intended for students in Year 10. We have therefore addressed VELS Level 6. Reading • • • • Read, view, analyse, critique on and discuss contemporary and classical imaginative texts that explore personal, social, cultural and political issues of significance to their own lives. Read, view, analyse and discuss a wide range of informative and persuasive texts and identify the multiple purposes for which texts are created. Explain how texts are shaped by the time, place and cultural setting in which they are created. Compare and contrast the typical features of particular texts and synthesise information from different texts to draw conclusions. Writing • • • • • • Write persuasive texts dealing with complex ideas and issues and control the linguistic structures and features that support the presentation of different perspectives on complex themes and issues. Select subject matter and begin to use a range of language techniques to try to position readers to accept particular views of people, characters, events, ideas and information. Compose a range of other texts, such as feature articles, web pages and workplace texts. Plan and deliver presentations, sequencing and organising complex ideas. Write accurately punctuated, grammatically sound and complex sentences with embedded clauses and phrases. Maximise the effects of rhythm and tone, and write with developing fluency. They proofread and edit their own writing for accuracy, consistency and clarity. Speaking & Listening • • • When engaged in discussion, they compare ideas, build on others’ ideas, provide and justify other points of view, and reach conclusions that take account of aspects of an issue. In their presentations, they make effective use of the structures and features of spoken language to deal with complex subject matter in a range of situations. Draw on a range of strategies to listen to and present spoken texts, including note-taking, combining spoken and visual texts, and presenting complex issues or information imaginatively to interest an audience. 5 Experiencing Poetry Section One Poetry: Love me, Love me not Rationale The aim of this section is to explore the themes ‘love’ and ‘friendship’ as they are conveyed through poetry. Ultimately, these activities work towards providing students with diverse learning opportunities. This unit has been designed to allow flexibility in teacher delivery and incorporates recommended extension and modified activities. Student learning objectives include building analytical skills in relation to successfully reading poetry, allowing students to explore ways of learning through a mix of group and individual work as well as encouraging students to contextualise their learning by identifying the ways in which poetry is still prevalent and relevant in present day society. Aims An overview of the objectives for each class (bullet points) • Students to apply a variety of language mechanisms and techniques to form coherent and creative texts aimed at a specific target audience • Students to successfully identify and understand key forms and mechanics of poetry and employ these mechanics in the creation of their own poems • Students to practice group work, presentation, reading and listening skills in the context of VELS standards; developing skills in listening to others and responding positively to their opinions • Students to successfully utilise ICT and research skills • Develop an increased understanding and awareness of the language techniques used in poetry and the impact these have on audience • Students to develop abilities in self-reflection and evaluation • Students to demonstrate ‘deeper level’ thinking by deconstructing messages within the poem and applying them to real world contexts Introduction Some of the more famous and widely used poems explore themes of ‘love’ and ‘friendship’. Indeed, Shakespeare’s more famous plays and sonnets tell tales of love and lust and– combined with the works of other classic poets–illustrate the (excuse the pun) love-affair poets have had with writing such poems throughout history. These themes are still relevant in current-day society – not only because of the literary heritage they have instilled within our culture, but also because that heritage is still being built upon. Contemporary artists, (including US rapper Eminem and his song ‘Stan’ for example) continue to find modern-day uses for poetic canons, which work to illuminate the importance of learning and exploring poetry today. 6 Experiencing Poetry 1/Part One: Intro to Love & Friendship Resources needed: data projector, laptop with internet and YouTube access, newspapers and magazines, A3 paper, glue and scissors, DVD copy of Ten Things I Hate About You (Gil Junger, 1999), recording equipment (for production of DVD/MP3) Activities Activity 1 Intro to love and friendship: What do these terms mean to me? Students to work in small groups to identify acronyms, synonyms and symbols that illustrate their understanding of the terms ‘love’ and ‘friendship’. Teachers may choose to enhance this task by providing students with newspapers and/or magazines and asking them to find and cut out words, shapes, symbols, cartoons or specific stories that demonstrate their understanding of ‘love’ and ‘friendship’. Ask students to share their answers with the class and either write their results on the board or post their articles in their homeroom or in an electronic shared folder for others to access. Extension activity: using the newspapers and magazines, ask students to cut out a range of words from latest headlines. Ensure they have at least a dozen words. Next, ask students to put the words together in order to create a line of a poem. Students could then share their line with a partner, or use their created line as a prompt and continue writing a poem in their notebooks. Use this activity to prompt further discussion on ‘love’ and ‘friendship’ and how these themes can be conveyed through poetry: • Can you identify or recall any poems you have heard about love and friendship? • Can you think of any present-day examples of poetry that convey love or friendship? Teachers may also choose to investigate student learning opportunities here and gather information on what and how their students would like to learn about poetry: • How would you like to learn about poetry? • Have you experienced any problems or difficulties with reading poetry? If so, what were they? • What skills do you think you need to ‘read’ and understand a poem? Are there any skills you would like to build upon? Activity 2 Famous poets and their poems: Note: Teachers should ensure that students have access to library/internet resources for this activity. Banjo Paterson on the Australian $10 note 7 Experiencing Poetry Divide students into small groups. Teachers may decide to use homogenous (based on ability) or heterogeneous (mixed ability) groups here, or simply allow students to work in a group of their choosing. Once divided, clearly explain that each group is to work together to research a famous poet and report back to the class on their findings. Depending on prior knowledge, teachers may choose to provide students with a short-list of poets. This short-list could include the following: William Shakespeare Rudyard Kipling Banjo Paterson Emily Dickenson Jane Austen Charlotte Bronte It may be useful for teachers (specifically for those students requiring a modified delivery) to set specific research questions to guide students’ learning. These may include a list of points about the poet that teachers would like each group to answer (i.e. their date of birth/death, where they lived, what they were famous for, a picture (if available) and a sample poem they wrote). Students may choose to present this information using PowerPoint or with the help of other internet clips or resources. Notes: Teachers should emphasise the importance of gathering reliable information (particularly if students are using internet resources for this activity). Teachers may like to use a ‘tip sheet’ which could list recommended websites. Teachers should also stress that students should try relay the information in their own words, not plagiarise, nor rely upon Wikipedia as a reliable information resource. Teachers may also like to ensure that at least one group selects William Shakespeare as their poet as this will provide a helpful lead into later activities using his works. Extension activity: Teachers may choose to extend this activity by asking students to analyse and/or perform a love/friendship poem by their selected poet as part of their presentation. Before the next lesson… Explain that students will need to have their presentations completed before the next lesson where they will be expected to present to the class. Activity 3 Shakespeare: ‘A Dead White Guy’? Ideally, students will have already completed Activity 2 through which one group will have provided the background information on William Shakespeare. Otherwise, teachers should take a moment to provide students with a brief biography. 8 William Shakespeare Experiencing Poetry Explain that the next activity is about understanding a poem’s message. Teachers may like to take this opportunity to provide students with some standard questions they may like to use when approaching a new poem. Explain that it can be difficult to understand the message of a poem straight away and that to ease us into this process, we could begin by noticing ‘things’ about the poem. These questions could include: 1. 2. 3. 4. What do you notice about the poem? What does the poem remind you of? Can you see any repetition or rhyming in the poem? Is there anything interesting about the poem’s shape or structure that you can see? Modified activity: Teacher’s may choose to guide students more readily into these questions by ensuring they write their responses in their notebooks and kick-start their answers by beginning their sentence for them (i.e. I notice…; this poem reminds me of…,). Using Shakespeare’s Sonnet 141, encourage students to re-write the sonnet using contemporary language. Part 1: It may be necessary to re-cap what a sonnet is here – specifically Shakespearean sonnets (see Section 1 Appendices for further information). Teachers may choose to read or perform Sonnet 141 themselves, or have students read aloud. Extension Activity: There is also the option of using a clip from the 1999 film – 10 Things I Hate About You (in which the high school English teacher raps this sonnet), in order to illustrate the ways in which poetry can be performed. Teachers could use this clip to further discuss the relevance of poetry today and some of the basics of performing to an audience (see next Activity 4 for further details). Students could then ‘perform’ this sonnet to the class. Sonnet 141 In faith, I do not love thee with mine eyes, For they in thee a thousand errors note; But ’tis my heart that loves what they despise, Who in despite of view is pleased to dote. Nor are mine ears with thy tongue’s tune delighted, Nor tender feeling to base touches prone, Nor taste, nor smell, desire to be invited To any sensual feast with thee alone. But my five wits, nor my five senses, can Dissuade one foolish heart from serving thee, Who leaves unswayed the likeness of a man, Thy proud heart’s slave and vassal wretch to be. Only my plague thus far I count my gain, That she that makes me sin awards me pain. Source: http://nfs.sparknotes.com/sonnets/sonnet_141.html 9 Experiencing Poetry Part 2: Students may choose to work in small groups or individually for this task. Teachers should emphasise the importance of ‘translating’ this sonnet on a line-by-line basis. Once completed, students should be given the opportunity to perform their translated sonnet for the class. Modified Activity: Prompt students to write answers to the 4 questions discussed earlier in this activity. Students should also make a list of the words they do not recognise or understand and work towards defining these words. Students should also work at ‘translating’ the first quatrain. Extension Activity: Students should attempt their own sonnet, ensuring they stick to the correct form and structure and convey themes of love and/or friendship. Activity 4 Poetry in production: poems = written to be heard. Notes: Teachers will need access to recording equipment (e.g. video camera, sound recorder, recorder software on MAC/PC). If teachers are unable to access this equipment, they may instead choose to host a ‘live’ performance and have students perform their selected poem in front of another class or their family/community if suitable. Teachers should allow at least 3 periods for writing, rehearsing and performing this activity. Teachers should explain to students that this activity is performance based and requires them to perform their poem either to camera or in front of a live audience. Part 1: Students should write their own sonnet (or other form of poetry). Students may choose to write their own sonnet based on Shakespeare’s Sonnet 141 (similar to the film 10 Things I Hate About You in which the central character performs the ‘10 Things’ poem in couplet form). Alternatively, teachers could select another of poem to use as a prompt or allow students to formulate their own without a prompt. Once written, students should practice rehearsing their poems and focus on key performance elements. Teachers should re-cap important elements to remember when performing (including tone, expression, emphasis, body movements, eye contact, delivery speed, audience etc). Teachers may like to run a few ‘warm-up’ activities to get students comfortable with the concept of performing their piece. Such activities could include having students read a selected poem at different speeds (i.e. really fast versus very slow) and analyse the difference the speed of delivery had on their response to the poem. Teachers could run other activities around emphasis and body language using a similar format. Part 2: Students should perform their written piece live to an audience or teachers should record their pieces on camera/sound recorder. If teachers choose to do the latter, the recorded pieces could be turned into a DVD or MP3 available to students (in compliance with policies of specific school). 10 Experiencing Poetry Section One Appendices • Sonnet Characteristics • • • A sonnet is a poem with 14 lines, divided into 4 ‘quatrains’ (or sections). The rhyme scheme of a Shakespearean sonnet is ABAB / CDCD / EFEF / GG Sonnets are written in iambic pentameter: a poetic meter with 10 beats per line made up of alternating unstressed and stressed syllables. A sonnet can be broken down into four sections called quatrains. The first three quatrains contain four lines each and use an alternating rhyme scheme. The final quatrain consists of just two lines which both rhyme. Each quatrain should progress the poem as follows: First quatrain: This should establish the subject of the sonnet. Number of lines: 4. Rhyme Scheme: ABAB Second quatrain: This should develop the sonnet’s theme. Number of lines: 4. Rhyme Scheme: CDCD Third quatrain: This should round off the sonnet’s theme. Number of lines: 4. Rhyme Scheme: EFEF Fourth quatrain: This should act as a conclusion to the sonnet. Number of lines: 2. Rhyme Scheme: GG • • • • • • Source: http://shakespeare.about.com/od/thesonnets/a/what_is_a_sonnet.htm • Suggested Rubrix for Performance Activity 4 CRITERIA Control of selected form/genre Use of ideas generated by set context Use of language and structure appropriate to audience and purpose Mastery of key performance elements (e.g. tone, gesture, expression etc) Evidence of planning and revision 5 4 3 2 1 0 11 Experiencing Poetry Section Two Morbid Pop: The Concept of Death in Poetry and Culture Rationale This section will enable students to explore the concept of death as it is used in film, gothic literature, poetry and music lyrics. The unit is divided into five sections: Death and Horror In Film, Edgar Allan Poe’s The Raven, Japanese Death Poetry and Butoh Dance of Darkness, Suicide and Seppuku, and Grief and Mourning. The unit is divided in this way to address the multi-faceted complexity that death has played in cultural texts for thousands of years. Each section facilitates a diverse range of teaching and learning opportunities which stretch beyond the poetry itself, enabling critical exploration of contextual topics. Such topics address issues related to cultural understanding, human motivation and social justice. Students will explore a wide variety of poetic devices, narratives and structures which aim to engage awareness and advocacy. The ultimate aim of this section is for students discover their own capacity to question their assumptions about poetry and how it is interwoven into the entire spectrum of the human condition. Aims • • • • • • Explore the Elements of Horror as extracted from gothic literature by identifying their representation and purpose in modern horror film. Analyse ‘The Raven’ by breaking the poem down into sections and interpreting the text into simplified language. They will identify how the themes of love, madness, the supernatural and death manifest themselves into the atmosphere of the poetry, and will also identify Poe’s use of Gothic Elements as well as modern media interpretations. Investigate Japan’s classic poetic structures, haiku and waka, and how they were used to paint the final thoughts of samurai, poets and monks. Explore the concept of life cycle, renewal and rebellion through Butoh Dance. Identify and elaborate on a variety of contexts related to suicide, its glamorisation and prevention. Analyse, compare, discuss, create and perform different texts related to grief, death, war, mourning suicide and anger. 12 Experiencing Poetry Introduction Death has been represented in poetry for thousands of years. Ancient Greek Tragedians like Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides wrote highly emotional portrayals of once-great humans falling into neurotic pits of despair and chaos, pleading to the gods for Mercy. Though the action itself was rarely violent, death was laced into the prose, and often the audience was left with their imaginations to think the unthinkably grotesque. In Euripides’ Medea, for example, the titular character seeks revenge for her husband’s infidelity by giving a poisoned crown to his new bride. A Messenger approaches Medea and describes the gruesome death of the bride and her father: “Defeated by her suffering, she fell to the ground, difficult to recognize except by a parent, for the form of her eyes was not clear, nor her beautiful face, and blood was dripping from the top of her head, burning with fire, her flesh flowing off the bone like pine sap from the poison's hidden teeth, a terrible sight. Everyone was afraid to touch the corpse, for we had her misfortune as our teacher. Her father, however—poor man, in ignorance of the disaster, he came suddenly into the house and fell on the corpse. He groaned and embraced her, kissing her hands, crying, “My poor child, what god has destroyed you so pitifully? Who makes this old man, one foot in the grave, bereft of you? Oh, would that I could die with you, child!” When he stopped wailing and groaning, the old man tried to stand up, but the fine dress, like ivy on the branches of a laurel, clung to his skin, the struggling was terrible. The more he tried to rise to his knees, the more she held on. If he used force, he was just tearing the flesh off his own old bones. In time he gave up and, unfortunate man, let go his soul, for he could no longer fight the evil, The corpses lay there, the young girl with her old father close by, a disaster regretted with tears. “ What is particularly effective about this scene is how it describes the offstage action—the audience can only imagine a beautiful girl slowly burning to death, her ‘flesh flowing off the bone’ and her father—attempting to save her—becoming literally stuck to his daughter’s poisoned skin, and must resolve to letting go of his soul and slowly burning to death as well. The scene is gruesome and ugly, yet it is all happening in the minds of the audience. Death in poetry has continued its tradition of painting a tragic, beautiful and at times gruesome picture in the reader’s imagination. It does this using language, rhythm and narrative specifically focused on plucking particular strings in the reader’s emotions. Many young people today would connect death not to written poetry, but to its visual representation in film, television and music. Many have expressed concern about the amount of violent death featured in these mediums. For example, according to the National Institute of Mental Health, by the age of 16 the average American has seen 18,000 murders on television. Popular music frequently has morbid elements that emphasize death’s destructive and catastrophic nature. Many parents and professionals find such lyrical topics unsavoury and feel they promote destructive and 13 Experiencing Poetry suicidal behaviour in adolescents, and have heralded campaigns to ban, censor or deface the music and its creators. In the following units, students will examine death and violence in various historic, modern, poetic and social contexts, and determine their own understanding of its purpose and value in culture. 14 Experiencing Poetry 1/Part One: Death and Horror in Film Aim In this section, students will learn the Elements of Horror as extracted from gothic literature by identifying their representation and purpose in modern horror film. This knowledge will then be used by students to identify individual elements in specific classic horror scenes, construct their own modern adaptation of classic urban legends, and later use it to guide their understanding of Poe’s The Raven. Suggested Materials: computer, data projector, film clips, blank table worksheets, sinister horror sound effects and music, torches, urban legends examples, cameras, video editing software. Introduction For centuries films have featured death and horror in a number of scenarios. Beginning in the 1950’s, a popular motif involved attacks on humanity by the (un)natural order—sharks, birds, piranhas, crocodiles, frogs, bees, killer tomatoes and blobs. A vast array of films have featured disastrous and life-threatening phenomena such as diseases, accidents and natural disasters. Ghost and ‘monster’ movies emerged in the silent film era, shortly followed by demons and satanic possession, serial killers and zombies. A particular focus in these films is death. In the past several decades, many viewers have found themselves fascinated by films with violent, gory death scenes. However, not all ‘horror films’ utilise graphic death scenes to convey morbid terror. Many rely on classic elements such as suspense, atmosphere and high emotions to convey fear in their characters and enable viewers to experience it as well. These elements have all been plucked from gothic literature of previous centuries. Nosferatu, 1922 The Elements of Horror The elements of horror have been established through centuries of gothic novels, poems and stories. In the past century, films have adapted these elements from literature to interpret stories of horror and terror into a visual format. (See Appendices 1.1 for full list) Questions: • • • • What are common themes, plots, settings and characters used in horror films? Why do some people like scary stories and movies? Do you think horror has changed over the years? How and why? Which horror ‘villains’ do you think have been around the longest? Why? 15 Experiencing Poetry Activities Clipshow Show a few clips of classic horror scenes. For each clip, have students write down the horror elements used and how they are used. Use a table for organisation. NOTE: Try to avoid gore. Suggested clips: o o o o o o o o o o Nosferatu (1922) Staircase scene The Omen (1976) Priest death scene Jaws (1975) Skinny dipping death scene The Evil Dead 2 (1987) Maniacal cabin laughing scene The Shining (1980) ‘All work and no play’ scene Scream (1996) Drew Barrymore phone call scene An American Werewolf in London (1981) Transformation scene Psycho (1960) Shower scene Ringu or The Ring (1998/2002) Girl coming out of the TV scene Mullholland Drive (2001) Dumpster scene Sound Effects Lightning Writing Using a collection of creepy Horror/Halloween sound effects and music, have students do ‘automatic writing’ (aka stream of consciousness writing) relevant to the particular sounds. Scaffold the theme if necessary. For example, if you play a collage of howling wind, thunder, lightning and ghostly moans, you can give them the title “Lost in a Dark Forest.” For a collage of creaking stairs, slamming doors and nails scratching, you can give them the title, “The Abandoned House.” 1-2 minutes for each segment. Campfire Stories Give students time to brainstorm their favourite ghost/horror stories or write their own. Have them sit in a circle like a campfire, turn off the light and tell their stories. Bring two torches to class—one for you and one for the student telling the story. IT’S ALIVE! Group Project. Students choose their favourite classic horror stories/urban myths. Film, edit and present a live-action re-telling of the story using modern references and ideas. Incorporate at least four different Elements of Horror into the story. Suggested stories and urban myths: • • The Babysitter and the Man Upstairs: A teenage babysitter frantically phones the police after receiving prank calls from a stranger. The police inform him/her that the phone calls are coming from inside the house. Aren’t You Glad You Didn’t Turn On the Light?: A uni student goes to a party while her roommate stays home to study. Late at night, the party girl decides to swing by her flat and pick up a few things. The lights are out when she gets there. She assumes her roommate fell asleep and doesn’t turn on the light as to not wake her. The next day she comes home and finds her roommate murdered. Written in blood on the wall is: “Aren’t you glad you didn’t turn on the light?” 16 Experiencing Poetry • • • The Body in the Bed: A newlywed couple on their honeymoon complains of a weird odour in their hotel room. After airing the room out and searching for mould, they lift up the mattress and discover a decomposing body. The Fatal Tan: A girl obsessed with tanning browns herself one too many times. Her internal organs cook and she dies on the tanning bed. The Hook: A boy and girl drive to Lover’s Lane. They hear a radio announcement that an escaped criminal with a hook for a hand is on the loose. They hear an eerie scratching noise on the car. They try to ignore it, but when it continues they quickly drive off. Upon arriving home they discover a bloodied hook hanging from the car’s door handle. IT’S ALIVE!: Refection Questions • • • • • • • Why did you choose this particular urban legend? How have you ‘modernized’ it? What have you altered from the original story? What have you kept from the original story? Which Elements of Horror have you chosen to use? For each element, explain why you chose to use it and what effect it is intended to have on the narrative and the audience. How did you contribute to the production? How did other group members contribute to the production? What was one thing you could improve on for the next group project? 17 Experiencing Poetry 2/Part Two: The Raven, by Edgar Allen Poe Aim Students will analyse ‘The Raven’ by breaking the poem down into sections and interpreting the text into simplified language. They will identify how the themes of love, madness, the supernatural and death manifest themselves into the atmosphere of the poetry, and will also identify Poe’s use of Gothic Elements. They will then compare the written text to The Simpsons version of The Raven, drawing on their understanding of the text to interpret meaning behind character representation and use of humour. Suggested Materials: copies of The Raven, textas, highlighters, Mad Magazine clip, computer, data projector, The Simpsons’ Treehouse of Horror (S2E3, segment: The Raven) Introduction The Raven (1845) is a narrative gothic poem written by Edgar Alan Poe. It describes a single evening in the bedroom of a man mourning the loss of his love, Lenore. A talking Raven pays an eerie visit to the man, who is driven into maniacal distress by the bird’s repeated utterance of the word, ‘Nevermore.’ Themes: Madness Melancholy /Love The Supernatural Death Poetic Devises: Alliteration Internal Rhyme Musicality Stylised Language Narrative Devises: Atmosphere Gothic Elements Unreliable Narrator “Nevermore!” Activities What drives people crazy? Have students recall media examples of the use of people ‘going psycho,’ or ‘losing their mind.’ Common Themes: the supernatural, isolation, grief, paranoia Examples: The Shining Fight Club Misery Psycho Cast Away Secret Window 18 Experiencing Poetry Questions: • • • What do these common themes suggest about human behaviour? What are little kids scared of? How does this suggest that fear and anxiety are innate? Recall media examples of monsters, aliens, zombies, vampires, ghosts, wizards, mutants or any other supernatural being. How do people in films react to encountering these beings? Why do they react this way? What do they fear will happen? What usually happens next? Tip #1: As the language is highly stylized, it will help teachers to study the poem beforehand to get an idea of the purpose of each stanza and the meaning behind various words and phrases (e.g. Pallas, obeisance, Gilead, quaff, nepenthe, Night’s Plutonian shore) Tip #2: Use audio recordings of famous people reading The Raven (try James Earl Jones, Christopher Walken, Vincent Price). Students might enjoy the performative aspect of the reading, as opposed to the normal ‘teacher reading voice’ they’re used to. Mark it up As the students read along, encourage them to identify themes by marking words or phrases with L (love), M (madness), S (supernatural) or D (death). Underline, highlight or circle uses of alliteration, internal or external rhyme. Modern Drama In pairs, translate to modern English. Then act out—one student acting, the other narrating the events. Gothic Elements concept map In groups, students develop concept maps of the Elements of Horror used in The Raven. Compare the traditional and modern representations of these elements. Diagrammatic Representations • • Draw the setting Produce a timeline of the poem (divided into eighteen sections—one for each stanza) outlining the state of mind and consciousness of the narrator Mad Magazine Parody The Raven has been parodied for years in print, TV, song and film. In this activity, students will create their own print parody. Show them a segment of Mad Magazine’s 1954 comic strip parody of The Raven (see Appendix 2.2), which used the original text with absurd illustrations. In this activity, students will create their own comic strip parody using absurd or unrelated illustrations. How does this change the meaning of the text? Extension: Nevermore re-write: In 1959, Mad Magazine released another parody of The Raven. Rather than “Nevermore,” the narrator is bombarded with commercial taglines. In one of the Scary 19 Experiencing Poetry Movie films, the line turns into “Quoth Wes Craven: Let’s Make More!” (a commentary on the production line-quality of the famous horror director’s filmography). Have students re-write the poem, changing the famous line. Encourage them to change the setting, characters and theme. How does this change the meaning of the poem? Modern Media Comparison: The Simpsons’ Treehouse of Horror (see Appendix 2.3) In 1990, The Simpsons ran its first episode of Treehouse of Horror, originally titled The Simpsons’ Halloween Special. Consisting of three unrelated Halloween-themed segments, the finale was an adaptation of Edgar Allan Poe’s The Raven. Narrated by James Earl Jones and starring Homer, Marge and Bart as the narrator, Lenore and the raven, respectively, creator Matt Groening was originally worried it would come off as pretentious. It has since become a classic retelling of the old tale, and for many young people, their first exposure to Edgar Allan Poe. The narrator (Homer) orders the Raven (Bart) to leave him in peace. Students should watch this segment noting both similarities and differences between the clip and the original text. Questions: • Why were these characters chosen to play the Poe characters? • Examples of humour used. Does it work? Why? • What do you think of Lisa’s explanation that people were easier to scare in 1845? • How would other modern TV satires depict The Raven? (think: Family Guy, South Park, How I Met Your Mother) 20 Experiencing Poetry 3/Part Three: Japanese Death Haiku and Butoh Dance of Darkness Aim In this section students will learn about Japan’s classic poetic structures, haiku and waka, and how they were used to paint the final thoughts of samurai, poets and monks. They will use this knowledge to modernize famous death poems as well as create their own for modern deceased celebrities. Students will explore the concept of life cycle and renewal through Butoh Dance, a spiritual art form rebelling against the Westernization of Japanese culture. Students will construct their own art rebelling against an aspect of society. Suggested Materials: Handout: Famous Japanese Death Poems; other death poems, list of dead celebrities, article: About Butoh, videos of Seppuku and Butoh dance, computers with internet access, data projector, atmospheric Japanese music, textas, Introduction Death has long since been a common theme in Japanese art and spirituality. Shinto and Buddhism, the two most popular religions in Japan, both integrate ideas of nature, integrity, connectivity, life and death into their traditions. These concepts have been interwoven into the fabric of Japanese art, society, law and culture for thousands of years. Jisei, Japanese Death Poetry It is ancient tradition for literate people—particularly Zen Monks and writers—to compose jisei on their deathbeds. The custom continues today. The poems are traditionally composed in kanshi (Japanese poetry composed in Chinese) waka (classical verse) or haiku. "The haiku that reveals seventy to eighty percent of its subject is good. Those that reveal fifty to sixty percent, we never tire of." --Matsuo Bashou, legendary haiku poet 21 Experiencing Poetry Typical haiku structure: • • • • Use of three lines of up to 17 syllables (traditionally 5-7-5) Use of a season word or kigo, a word or phrase associated with a particular season Use of a cut or kire (sometimes indicated by punctuation) to compare two images implicitly) Few words to describe a multi-tiered structure Typical waka structure: • • Verse in short-form (tanka) or long-form (choka) Strictly no concept of rhyme. No accidental rhyme, either! Activities: Famous Japanese Death Poems (See Appendices 3.1) Students use the provided worksheet to draw comparisons to three of the most famous Japanese Death Poems. Using a table, label each section with the following headings: Author, Occupation, Type of Poem, Imagery Used, Season Word, Emotion, Meaning. Pair Interpretation (See Appendices 3.2) In pairs, students should choose one death poem from the second handout provided and answer the following questions: • • • • • Explain the meaning of the poem in your own words. What is the subject? What imagery does the poem use? Death poems often indicate a state of emotion in the writer’s final hour. What state of emotion do you think your poet was in? (Was this a peaceful death? Was he bitter with the world?) Say the poem out loud in Japanese. How does it compare to its English translation? Do you think anything was ‘lost in translation’? If so, what? Why? Celebrity Death Poem Write a death poem (waka or haiku) for at least one of the following famous dearly departed. Remember simplicity, emotion, seasons, human senses. Marilyn Monroe Amy Winehouse Elvis Presely Ned Kelley Kurt Cobain Henry Ford Harold Holt Charlie Chaplin Thomas Edison Leonardo DaVinci Jimi Hendrix Albert Einstein Charles Darwin Michael Jackson Heath Ledger Steve Jobs Carl Williams John Lennon 22 Experiencing Poetry Butoh, Dance of Death Butoh is an avant-garde performance art originating in the 1960’s. Its founders were a young rebellious modern dancer named Tatsumi Hijikata and his partner Kazuo Ohno. Post-War Japan was a time of transition, attempting to hold onto its traditional values while Western Democratic values from America began to saturate popular culture. Butoh was born out of Hijikata’s dissatisfaction with Japan’s newfound scene of Westernized dance. Originally called ‘Ankoku Butoh,’ or Dance of Darkness, the darkness referred to the area of unknown to mankind, either within himself or in his surroundings. It involves playful and grotesque imagery, taboo topics, absurd and surreal environments, and most uniquely, slow hypercontrolled motion. It uses Shinto, an ancient Japanese religion composed of a deep respect for nature. Butoh traditionally attempts to connect ideas of body, mind and spirit with the worship of nature. It speaks to the dark part of the soul—using highly elaborate makeup and costuming to depict death, ghosts and demons— but also speaks to the process of renewal and rebirth. (See Appendices 3.3) Questions: • • • • • Can death in art be beautiful? What media examples depict this kind of ‘grotesque beauty’? (e.g. Edward Scissorhands, Nightmare Before Christmas, Silent Hill, Black Swan) Why does Butoh dance try to connect life, Butoh performers death and nature? What are some other forms of art (movies, magazines, photography, tv shows) that are rebelling against tradition? Give specific examples. Why are they rebelling? Who or what are they rebelling against? What do they have to do to stay ‘fresh’ or ‘cutting edge’? Activities: Song Lyrics Using the internet, find lyrics to a song that juxtaposes grotesque and beautiful imagery. What is the song’s meaning? What effect does the imagery have? Write your own song lyrics which convey a similar meaning. Picture This Draw a picture incorporating elements of life, death and nature. 23 Experiencing Poetry All the World’s a Stage Write and act out a short scene depicting each stage in life (birth, childhood, adulthood, old age, death). The scene can incorporate the slowed-down micro-movement used in Butoh dance if the student desires. Rebel Art Rebel against society! What bothers you about authority, the government, the economy, social classification? Why are bad tv, bad music and bad internet memes saturating our world and our minds? Have students choose something to rebel against (an idea, concept or specific example) and create one of the following: Illustrated Haiku Waka Dramatic scene Campaign speech Song Butoh dance TV/radio ad Children’s book Protest speech Talk Show Billboard ad (poster) 24 Experiencing Poetry 4/Part Four: Suicide and Seppuku Aim By the end of this section, students will be able to identify and elaborate on a variety of contexts related to suicide, its glamorisation and prevention. Students will demonstrate their knowledge of the identifying factors of marginalised or isolated individuals. They will draw inspiration from popular music and Bukowski poetry to create a list of warning signs and preventative strategy action sheets. Using internet news articles, they will form arguments for or against bands and music genres often blamed for glamorising or instigating suicide and violence. Finally, students will investigate a different angle of suicide—that of honour—in the Japanese seppuku, reserved for doomed samurai. They will compare the tradition to ‘Hollywood’ parodies of the act. They will use their knowledge to engage in an informed verbal and written persuasive debate over the depiction of suicide in popular media and what steps need to be taken to uphold a more responsible position in our culture. Suggested Materials: computers for internet research and creative projects, data projector, YouTube videos of “Born this Way” and traditional seppuku ceremony, speakers, mp3 player, music and student copies of lyrics for “Born This Way” and “Adam’s Song,” student copies of Bukowski’s The Laughing Heart, posterboard, textas, cameras, camcorders, video editing software. Introduction Suicide is a relevant issue to teenagers not only because of its representation in classic literature and modern music, but because of the social fragility teenagers are often forced to deal with. Many students in high school experience social, physical and emotional obstacles every day, and hence become marginalized and alienated. Many schools employ anti-bullying campaigns, school counsellors and peer support workers which all assist in an effort to bring a whole-school approach to eliminating bullying and identifying the warning signs of depression and suicide. Tip: Before the unit commences, make sure you discuss the sensitivity of the subject of suicide. Read the following statement or something of its nature: “In the next few lessons we will be covering a very sensitive issue. You may be affected personally by the topic that we are discussing today, or you may know someone else who is. Please be respectful and thoughtful of others, and treat the subject responsibly. If you would like to talk to someone after the lesson, you can talk to…” (e.g. you as their teacher, school counsellor, welfare coordinator, etc.) Questions: 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) What do you know about suicide? Do you know anyone famous or anyone personally who has done it? What do you think are the main causes of teen suicide? Who is bullied? Why are they bullied? How does it lead to suicide? What preventative strategies or organisations are available? Why does it still happen? 25 Experiencing Poetry Activities Born This Way by Lady Gaga Lyric Analysis (See Appendices 4.1) Students divide into groups—one group for each stanza—and put the lyrics into their own words. What is this song about? What literary devices are used? Why are certain words and phrases repeated? Listen to the song Thinking Music Using the chart in (See Appendices 4.2), students brainstorm words, thoughts and images they think of while listening to the song. Combine student responses into a large class concept map. Genretized What if the song was done in a different genre? Would it change the message? Would the language be different? Students choose a different genre of music and re-write the lyrics to fit the style while maintaining the original message. If the message has changed, students must provide a written justification. Watch the film clip In small groups, students record and discuss the use of the following imagery: homosexuality, heterosexuality, sensuality, death, love, acceptance, equity, grotesque. Why do you think Lady Gaga chose to make the video for this song look like this? Impact Many young people idolize Lady Gaga for her style, attitude and equal rights advocacy. One boy, Jamey Rodemeyer, a 14-year-old bullied gay boy, thanked Lady Gaga in his last video blog entry before committing suicide. Lady Gaga has since dedicated songs to him and other suicide victims in her live performances. Unfortunately, Lady Gaga has also come under fire by some conservative groups, who state that her persona encouraged Jamey to behave in such a way that would incite bullying. Hence, she has been partly blamed for his suicide. Blame Game Research other artists, bands, music genres, video games, TV shows and movies which have been blamed for influencing teen suicide or violence. Do you think they are responsible? If so, how? If not, what or who is to blame, and why have these mediums come under fire? How is death, violence and suicide glamorized in these examples? Advertisement Design an advertisement for a human rights organisation or a suicide prevention campaign targeting LGBT at-risk youth. Draw inspiration from the quote below by gay rights activist and first gay politician to be elected to public office in the U.S., Harvey Milk: 26 Experiencing Poetry Cheer up, Emo kid Students read the article Emo Music Blamed on Teen Suicide (NME, 8 May, 2008—see Appendices 4.3) and answer the following questions: • • • • What aspects of ‘emo’ as a subculture are discussed in the article? What is your definition of the emo subculture and emo music? How does emo mix the concepts of love and death? How might this affect someone who loves someone unrequitedly or has recently broken up with their boyfriend/girlfriend? Do you think all emo music glamorizes death? Why or why not? Really? Dear Editor Students write a letter to the editor of NME defining their own point of view on the article—did emo music really kill the teen or was it a mix of issues? What other aspects could have contributed to her death? What aspects of emo music and subculture have gotten out of control? 27 Experiencing Poetry Mate Debate Has emo gone too far? Does it really encourage teens to harm themselves? Students choose a side— yes or no—and participate in a class debate over the topic. Adam’s Song by Blink-182 Lyric Analysis (See Appendices 4.4) Students divide into groups—one group for each stanza—and put the lyrics into their own words. What is this song about? What literary devices are used? Why are certain words and phrases repeated? How does the tone of the message change at the end? Listen to the song Thinking Music: Using the chart in (See Appendices 4.2), students brainstorm words, thoughts, feelings and images they think of while listening to the song. Combine student responses into a large class concept map. Appealing: What appeals are used in this song (e.g. emotional, nostalgic, family)? Why are they used and what impact do they have? Gimme a sign As a class, brainstorm signs of depression and suicidal thoughts. Then, devise a class action plan. What would you do if someone began revealing past regrets? Or criticised themselves? What would you do if you found out your friend’s parents were getting a divorce? Or one of their parents died? Or they broke up with their boyfriend/girlfriend? The Laughing Heart by Charles Bukowski This uplifting poem was written by a man who spent most of his life curled up inside a bottle of Maker’s. It is included in this section as a discussion point of prevention and healing. Analyse: Meaning, poetic devises, rhythm and repetition (See Appendices 4.5) Why does nothing rhyme? What effect does this have on the message? What is repeated? Why are these lines repeated? How is this related to the central message? Discuss aspects of Bukowski’s life and literary works. How does this impact students’ understanding of the poem’s message? Slam It Memorise and perform the poem in the style of slam poetry. 28 Experiencing Poetry Happy Medium Illustrate the poem using one of the following mediums: • • • • • • • Film clip Comic strip Anime Claymation Picture book Dramatic scene Song (compose music to accompany the words as lyrics) Help! I Need Somebody Have students devise a Suicide Prevention Action Sheet using the Bukowski poem as inspiration. Include contact information for at least three Victorian suicide prevention organisations. (SuicideLine, Life Line, Beyond Blue, Life Comminications, Are You OK Day?, Victorian Aboriginal Suicide Prevention and Response Action Plan) Seppuku Seppuku is a Japanese ritual suicide by disembowelment. Originally reserved for samurai, it was used voluntarily as a way to die with honour rather than fall into the hands of the enemy, as well as a form of capital punishment for serious offences. Usually part of a more elaborate ceremony involving spectators, it has been officially abolished since 1873. Questions: • • Symbolically, what is the difference between this form of suicide and others? Do you think Samurai performing seppuku would have written a death poem? If so, what would have been the tone and what type of imagery you would likely see used? Dumbledore Death Poem Compose a death poem for a fallen fictional character. Traditional Seppuku. Who’s Who Seppuku has not been limited to samurai. Actors, writers, politicians and even modern western musicians have killed themselves in this style over the years. Write and perform a news editorial on whether or not this is a dishonourable way of suicide outside of Japanese samurai custom. You can do it from the point of view of a journalist, samurai descendent, or friend of a non-samurai who has killed themselves via seppuku. 29 Experiencing Poetry Pop cultural parodies of seppuku Particularly in Western societies, seppuku is often parodied or used to convey a ridiculous or comedic message. It has been referenced or parodied in many films, tv shows, animations and literature from around the world, including: Liar, Liar Saturday Night Live Star Trek How I Met Your Mother Harold and Maude Sailor Moon Questions: • • • • Why might audiences find pop cultural uses of seppuku funny or offensive? Do you ever see other forms of suicide parodied or used in a comedic way? Where have you seen/read it? Do you find it funny? Why or why not? What ideas about traditional Japanese culture does it convey? Do you think Westerners get this confused with Modern Japanese culture? If so, how? How does this compare to glamorized depictions of death and suicide we discussed earlier? Does it promote the same message? If not, what does it promote to viewers? Class Debate Divide the class into two teams, one advocating the use of seppuku in popular culture and one against it. Give them time to devise an argument. Everyone in the group should speak at least once. Encourage the use of charts, diagrams, surprise witnesses/experts. As this is a role-playing game, remember to insist on being respectful toward other people, cultures and traditions. Dear Editor Students take on the role of an informed individual related to the context of teen suicide and compose a ‘letter to the editor’ stating their viewpoint on the depiction of seppuku and other forms of suicide in popular media and what steps need to be taken to uphold a more responsible position in our culture, e.g. less glamorization in media, bigger cultural focus on prevention strategies, wider variety of education, the dishonourable image of westernized seppuku, etc. Students can choose to take on the role of one of the following individuals: • A parent, relative or friend of a suicide victim or attempted suicide • The director of a particular Victorian suicide prevention organisation • A musician or member of a band blamed for promoting anti-social behaviour in teenagers Protest Piece Students write a piece either advocating or criticising the use of seppuku in popular culture. You must convey who you are (you can make it up—be anyone!), why you feel this way and why others should feel the same way as well. Use persuasive appeals such as emotion, patriotism, bribery, etc.) Perform your petition to the class. Your piece can be structured in the following way: Slam/rap Song Rhyming couplets (AA BB CC DD…) Campaign commercial Haiku 30 Experiencing Poetry 5/Part Five: Grief and Mourning Aim In this section students will learn about the process of grieving and how music and poetry have assisted people in coping during these times. They will analyse and compare two different versions of the same eulogy song, as well as create a series of eulogies for different purposes, and research and present a persuasive oral presentation on the banning of pop and footy songs at Catholic funerals. Finally, they will investigate the events, poetry and music of 9/11, analyse three contrasting poems, articulating their own viewpoint on the nature and purpose of poetry in the time of national grief. They will end the unit with something fun: investigating the alleged ‘song ban’ made by Clear Channel Communications in the wake of 9/11. Students will investigate why these songs were banned and if companies were ethically right in making such suggestions. Introduction Grief is a response to loss, specifically death. Mourning is the act of responding to this loss. It is physical, cognitive, behavioural, social and philosophical. The way humans experience grief is varied across cultures, spiritualities, religions, communities, families and generations. Questions: • • • • Have you ever lost something or someone who was very important to you? How did you react to this loss? How long does grief last? How do different people experience grief? What aspects affect this state of mourning? Think of celebrities, politicians or other well-known individuals who have passed away. How have large groups or people reacted to their passing? Activities “Candle in the Wind”: a comparative analysis The first version of “Candle in the Wind” was written and performed by Elton John in 1973. It honoured Marilyn Monroe, who had died 11 years earlier of a drug overdose. Lyric Analysis (See Appendices 5.1) Students read and discuss “Candle in the Wind” and answer the following questions: • • • • • • How does Elton John describe Marilyn Monroe? What is the significance of him referring to her by her birth name ‘Norma Jean’? How does he describe her legacy? Why is this tragic? How does he view her? How does he see himself in her legacy? How is he expressing grief for her death? “It seems as if you led your life like a candle in the wind.” What does this phrase mean? What type of figurative language is it using? 31 Experiencing Poetry Listen to the song In small groups, students discuss the following and share their findings with the class: • • • What is the rhythm of the music and of the lyrics? What emotional effect does this have on you? What would happen to the message if the style of music was changed (e.g. into club music, hip hop, death metal) Why is the image of grief and mourning associated with slow, pretty music? Is other music ever appropriate? Why would different styles be used to convey grief? Which styles (or specific examples) could work best? I Would Have Liked to Know You Students write a letter to a fallen celebrity, athlete, family member or politician whom they never met personally. Draw inspiration from the lyrics of “Candle in the Wind.” This letter should have a rhythm to it which draws a sympathetic emotional response from the reader. Do this by imagining it as a song. What poetic devices does it use? (e.g. rhyme—which part of the lines rhyme?). Describe the person’s life in a way which describes their legacy—maybe their legacy should be different from what it is. Watch the video Students watch Elton John perform “Candle In the Wind” live in the 1970’s. Questions: 1) How is he honouring Marilyn Monroe using costume and makeup? 2) If a video-style film clip of this were made at the time, what would it look like? Video Killed the Movie Star Re-write ‘Candle in the Wind’ for a fallen celebrity, fictional character, athlete, or politician. Keep the rhythm and similar structure, but change everything else including the lyrics. E.g. ‘Sandle in the Chin’ could be about Kung Fu legend Bruce Lee. Then, make a film clip for your song. Candle in the Wind 1997 (See Appendices 5.2) In August 1997 Princess Diana of Wales was killed in a car accident. Renowned for her humanitarian efforts including work with AIDS sufferers, drug addicts, homeless and elderly, her legacy was honoured at her funeral by fellow Britton Elton John, who sang to 2.5 billion people, or roughly half the world’s population at the time. He sang a re-working of his 1971 song “Candle in the Wind”. Lyric Analysis and Comparison 1997 version Questions: o What imagery does he use? o What figurative language does he use? o How does he describe her legacy? o How does this song appeal to the audience emotionally? o How does it appeal to them patriotically? 32 Experiencing Poetry Comparison Questions: o Has the meaning of the metaphor ‘candle in the wind’ changed? o What are the major differences between the two versions? At Your Funeral A funeral is a ceremony celebrating, sanctifying or remembering the life of a person who has died. Different cultures and religions have their own funeral traditions. For the purposes of this unit, we will focus on the literary or poetic aspects of traditional, non-denominational Western funerals. Eulogies A eulogy is a speech made at funerals to honour and praise a deceased individual and his or her virtues. It is traditionally written and presented by a close relative or friend. It sometimes includes a poem or lyrics to a song which were either highly regarded by the deceased or convey a meaning appropriate in honouring the person’s life. Questions: • • • What are virtues? What kind of poetry would be appropriate in a eulogy? Can and should a funeral eulogy be funny? Explain your reasoning. Excerpt Using the internet, find a poem or lyrics that you would like to be said at your own funeral. Read this excerpt out loud to the class and explain your choice. The Royal Family at Princess Diana’s funeral, 1997. Eulogy for a Notable Figure Students research, write and perform a eulogy for a famous person in history. They should include at least three important aspects of this person’s life, why they are notable and how their legacy will live on. They should also find a quote or short excerpt of lyrics or poetry appropriate for this eulogy and weave it into their writing. They must be able to justify why they chose this excerpt. Costume, makeup, music and lighting are optional. Word Funeral As a class, students compose a list of overused, derogatory or silly words which must be put to rest. Then, each student chooses a word and writes a short eulogy for that word, including its origin, part of speech, purpose in language and why it needed to die. Students perform these eulogies with a print-out of the word next to them. After all students have given their word eulogies, they throw the words into the bin. Songs Many people, before they die, choose specific songs they’d like to be played at their funeral. 33 Experiencing Poetry Playlist (lists extracted from http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/weird/top-10-funeral-songsprovided-by-centennial-park/story-e6frev20-1111116794061) In 2008, Centennial Park, a leading provider of memorial services in Australia released their Top Ten most frequently-used songs at funerals: 1) My Way, Frank Sinatra 2) Wonderful World, Louis Armstrong 3) Time To Say Goodbye, Andrea Bocelli and Sarah Brightman 4) Unforgettable, Nat King Cole 5) The Wind Beneath My Wings, Bette Midler 6) Amazing Grace, various artists 7) We'll Meet Again, Vera Lynn 8) Over the Rainbow, Judy Garland 9) Abide With Me, Harry Secombe 10) Danny Boy, various artists They also released a list of what they consider the ‘most unusual’ songs used in their funeral services: 1) The Show Must Go On, Queen 2) Stairway to Heaven, Led Zeppelin 3) Highway to Hell, AC/DC 4) Another One Bites the Dust, Queen 5) I'll Sleep When I'm Dead, Bon Jovi 6) Always Look on the Bright Side of Life, Monty Python 7) Ding Dong the Witch is Dead, The Wizard of Oz 8) Hit the Road Jack, Willie Nelson 9) I'm Too Sexy, Right Said Fred 10) Power, Crows and AFL team songs Write a list of ten songs that you would like to play at your funeral. For each song, justify why you are including it on your list. Catholic Church Bans Pop Songs (See Appendices 5.3) Students read the article Australia’s Catholic Church bans pop songs at funerals (Reuters, 10-092010) and discuss the pros and cons of banning pop music and footy club songs at funerals. They choose a side: are you for the ban or against the ban? They then construct a persuasive power point presentation to present to the opposition. For example, if a student is for the ban, the rest of the class, as the audience, will play the part of musicians, music lovers and free speech advocates. If a student is against the ban, the class will play the part of Catholic Church officials. September 11th, 2001 The tragic terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center—which took the lives of over 3,000 Americans—is a day burnt into the memories of millions of people around the world. It was shocking, confusing and heartbreaking, and everyone reacted differently to it. Some, fuelled by angry patriotism, blamed the ‘terrorists’ and supported president George W. Bush when he announced the U.S. would ‘retaliate’ and ‘fight terrorism’ by invading Iraq and capturing Al-Qaeda. 34 Experiencing Poetry (To date, over 113,000 civilians in Iraq have died as a result of the war. Go to http://www.iraqbodycount.org for more information). Al-Qaeda became a buzzword umbrella term for all terrorist activities, and sparked a racist and misinformed fear of the ‘Islamification of America’ in many. Others turned to poetry and music as a way of healing and understanding the new direction America was facing within and beyond its borders. The music ranged from patriotic rage (e.g. country singer Toby Keith’s “Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue (We’ll Put A Boot In Your Ass)” to cross-cultural humanistic pride and slamming Bush’s presidency (Beastie Boys’ To the 5 Burroughs and Green Day’s American Idiot). Poetry had a similar differences in approach, with three main ideologies at work: retaliation and American pride, mourning the victims and sympathising with the objectified Muslims in the U.S., and questioning the US Government. Poetry Commotion (See Appendices 5.4) Students read the article Beyond Grief and Grievance: The poetry of 9/11 and its aftermath by Philip Metres and the accompanying poems. Questions: • • How does he explain why and how poetry became ‘useful’ in the wake of 9/11? How does he explain why many people were bothered by the act of poetry? 3 Different 9/11 Poems (See Appendices 5.5) Divide the class into 4 groups. One group will analyse “Albanza: In Praise of the Local 100,” one will analyse “Photograph from September 11,” and two will analyse “Somebody Blew Up America.” Questions: • • • • Poetic devices, rhythm, language What appeals does it use? How are they used? What is the meaning of this poem? What is its purpose? Who is the subject? If this were a song, what style would it be in? Why? ‘Somebody Blew Up America’ This poem was aggressively criticised when it was written, called ‘racist’ and ‘anti-Semitic’. But the author and many contemporaries have defended it, stating those who see it as racist are missing the point, for it is really a mirror being held up to powerful Western societies. What is your response to this poem? Who is the ‘who’ he constantly addresses? 35 Experiencing Poetry Slam It: “Somebody Blew Up America” Students watch the slam version of Amiri Baraka reading his poem. How does poetry change when it is read out loud? Using the slam video as inspiration, create a live performance of one of the provided 9/11 poems, or find a different one of your choice on the internet. Try memorizing it. Create an atmosphere and visual accompaniment—power point slides, candles, a poster, music, dance, body movement. To Defend It or Not to Defend It Is poetry appropriate to the nation in a time of grieving? Create an advertisement either advocating poetry or criticising its use after catastrophic events. Include references to political music, as well. You can also do this in the form of round-table discussion or a talk show. A Picture tells 1,000 words. “Photograph of September 11” was inspired by the photograph of the Falling Man, who fell to his death from one of the highest WTC storeys. Use the internet to find a picture of human suffering and write a poem or song of any style using it as inspiration. You are not limited to 9/11 pictures. Try Iraq War civilians, Afghanistan, Darfur, Khmer Rouge, Vietnam War, World War 1 & 2, Immigration Detention Centres, ‘boat people’, refugees, poverty, etc.) Clear Channel Song Ban In the wake of the awful events of 9/11. Clear Channel Communications, an American media conglomerate company, issued a list of songs to over 1200 radio stations, citing each of the songs as ‘lyrically questionable.’ Though a rumour started that it was an outright ban of these songs, it was later discovered that it was merely a suggestion Clear Channel made to these stations, though most stations did in fact follow suit. Clear Channel denies any list ever existing. The 165 ‘banned’ songs range from songs containing key words like ‘fall,’ ‘fly,’ ‘Tuesday,’ ‘Heaven’ and ‘September’ to songs of peace (e.g John Lennon’s “Imagine”), to songs of death (e.g. Drowning Pool’s “Bodies”) to politically-challenging songs, including all songs by Rage Against the Machine. A complete list is available in the appendices. Questions: • Why these songs? • Were they politically motivated choices? How or how not? • Are there any surprises to you on the list? • Are there any songs that you’re surprised aren’t on the list? 36 Experiencing Poetry • Do you agree with companies suggesting to radio stations to ban songs in the time of mourning? Do you think people would have made 9/11 connections to these songs if they heard them on the radio? Justification Students organise the songs into different categories: Death, Peace, Politics, Sensitive Language. In pairs, they choose one from each category, research and analyse the lyrics, and present their findings to the class. They must explain why they think these songs were included on the list, using specific lyrics as examples. They must also state their opinion—should this song have been banned? Was it a little silly including it on the list? Dear Friendly Neighbourhood Media Conglomerate Megacorporation… Write a letter to Clear Channel, either supporting or criticising their memorandum initiative. Write from the point of view of a student, parent, musician, politician, someone directly affected by the 9/11 attacks or not. Use the Metres article as well as your own knowledge of censorship and grief poetry to persuade them into understanding you viewpoint. 37 Experiencing Poetry Appendices 1/Part One: Elements of Death, Horror and Goth in Popular Culture 1.1 The Elements of Horror (source: http://www.virtualsalt.com/gothic.htm) 1. Creepy setting. The action takes place in and around an old castle, cabin, woods, house or some other isolated place, sometimes seemingly abandoned, sometimes occupied. The setting often contains secret passages, trap doors, secret rooms, dark or hidden staircases, and possibly ruined sections. A sense of claustrophobia, entrapment and mystery is present. 2. An atmosphere of mystery and suspense. The work is pervaded by a threatening feeling, a fear enhanced by the unknown. Often the plot itself is built around a mystery, such as unknown parentage, a disappearance, or some other inexplicable event. 3. An ancient prophecy The prophecy is usually obscure, partial, or confusing. "What could it mean?" In more watered down modern examples, this may amount to merely a legend: "It's said that the ghost of old man Krebs still wanders these halls." 4. Omens, portents, visions. A character may have a disturbing dream vision, or some phenomenon may be seen as a portent of coming events. For example, if the statue of the lord of the manor falls over, it may portend his death. 5. Supernatural or otherwise inexplicable events. Dramatic, amazing events occur, such as ghosts, talking animals or inanimate objects coming to life. In some works, the events are ultimately given a natural explanation, while in others the events are truly supernatural. 6. High, even overwrought emotion. The characters are often overcome by anger, sorrow, surprise, and especially terror. Characters suffer from raw nerves and a feeling of impending doom. Crying, emotional speeches, breathlessness, panic and screaming. 7. Person in distress. The characters often face events that leave them fainting, terrified, screaming, and/or sobbing. The women suffer all the more because they are often abandoned, left alone (either on purpose or by accident), and have no protector at times. 8. The metonymy of gloom and horror. Metonymy is a subtype of metaphor, in which something (like rain) is used to stand for something else (like sorrow). For example, the film industry likes to use metonymy as quick shorthand, so we often notice that it is raining in funeral scenes. The following metonymies for "doom and gloom" all suggest an element of mystery, danger, or the supernatural. E.g. darkness, rain, wind, sighs, moans, howls, eerie sounds, doors suddenly slamming shut 38 Experiencing Poetry 2/Part Two: The Raven 2.1 Text: Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary, Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore, While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping, As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door. "'Tis some visitor," I muttered, "tapping at my chamber doorOnly this, and nothing more." Ah, distinctly I remember it was in the bleak December, And each separate dying ember wrought its ghost upon the floor. Eagerly I wished the morrow;- vainly I had sought to borrow From my books surcease of sorrow- sorrow for the lost LenoreFor the rare and radiant maiden whom the angels name LenoreNameless here for evermore. And the silken, sad, uncertain rustling of each purple curtain Thrilled me- filled me with fantastic terrors never felt before; So that now, to still the beating of my heart, I stood repeating, "'Tis some visitor entreating entrance at my chamber doorSome late visitor entreating entrance at my chamber door;This it is, and nothing more." Presently my soul grew stronger; hesitating then no longer, "Sir," said I, "or Madam, truly your forgiveness I implore; But the fact is I was napping, and so gently you came rapping, And so faintly you came tapping, tapping at my chamber door, That I scarce was sure I heard you"- here I opened wide the door;Darkness there, and nothing more. Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there wondering, fearing, Doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to dream before; But the silence was unbroken, and the stillness gave no token, And the only word there spoken was the whispered word, "Lenore?" This I whispered, and an echo murmured back the word, "Lenore!"Merely this, and nothing more. Back into the chamber turning, all my soul within me burning, Soon again I heard a tapping somewhat louder than before. "Surely," said I, "surely that is something at my window lattice: Let me see, then, what thereat is, and this mystery exploreLet my heart be still a moment and this mystery explore;'Tis the wind and nothing more!" Open here I flung the shutter, when, with many a flirt and flutter, In there stepped a stately Raven of the saintly days of yore; Not the least obeisance made he; not a minute stopped or stayed he; But, with mien of lord or lady, perched above my chamber door- Perched upon a bust of Pallas just above my chamber doorPerched, and sat, and nothing more. Then this ebony bird beguiling my sad fancy into smiling, By the grave and stern decorum of the countenance it wore. "Though thy crest be shorn and shaven, thou," I said, "art sure no craven, Ghastly grim and ancient Raven wandering from the Nightly shoreTell me what thy lordly name is on the Night's Plutonian shore!" Quoth the Raven, "Nevermore." Much I marvelled this ungainly fowl to hear discourse so plainly, Though its answer little meaning- little relevancy bore; For we cannot help agreeing that no living human being Ever yet was blessed with seeing bird above his chamber doorBird or beast upon the sculptured bust above his chamber door, With such name as "Nevermore." But the Raven, sitting lonely on the placid bust, spoke only That one word, as if his soul in that one word he did outpour. Nothing further then he uttered- not a feather then he flutteredTill I scarcely more than muttered, "Other friends have flown beforeOn the morrow he will leave me, as my hopes have flown before." Then the bird said, "Nevermore." Startled at the stillness broken by reply so aptly spoken, "Doubtless," said I, "what it utters is its only stock and store, Caught from some unhappy master whom unmerciful Disaster Followed fast and followed faster till his songs one burden boreTill the dirges of his Hope that melancholy burden bore Of 'Never- nevermore'." But the Raven still beguiling all my fancy into smiling, Straight I wheeled a cushioned seat in front of bird, and bust and door; Then upon the velvet sinking, I betook myself to linking Fancy unto fancy, thinking what this ominous bird of yoreWhat this grim, ungainly, ghastly, gaunt and ominous bird of yore Meant in croaking "Nevermore." This I sat engaged in guessing, but no syllable expressing To the fowl whose fiery eyes now burned into my bosom's core; This and more I sat divining, with my head at ease reclining On the cushion's velvet lining that the lamp-light gloated o'er, But whose velvet violet lining with the lamp-light gloating o'er, She shall press, ah, nevermore! 39 Experiencing Poetry Then methought the air grew denser, perfumed from an unseen censer Swung by Seraphim whose footfalls tinkled on the tufted floor. "Wretch," I cried, "thy God hath lent thee- by these angels he hath sent thee Respite- respite and nepenthe, from thy memories of Lenore! Quaff, oh quaff this kind nepenthe and forget this lost Lenore!" Quoth the Raven, "Nevermore." "Prophet!" said I, "thing of evil! - prophet still, if bird or devil! Whether Tempter sent, or whether tempest tossed thee here ashore, Desolate yet all undaunted, on this desert land enchantedOn this home by Horror haunted- tell me truly, I imploreIs there- is there balm in Gilead?- tell me- tell me, I implore!" Quoth the Raven, "Nevermore." "Prophet!" said I, "thing of evil! - prophet still, if bird or devil! By that Heaven that bends above us- by that God we both adoreTell this soul with sorrow laden if, within the distant Aidenn, It shall clasp a sainted maiden whom the angels name LenoreClasp a rare and radiant maiden whom the angels name Lenore." Quoth the Raven, "Nevermore." "Be that word our sign in parting, bird or fiend," I shrieked, upstarting"Get thee back into the tempest and the Night's Plutonian shore! Leave no black plume as a token of that lie thy soul hath spoken! Leave my loneliness unbroken!- quit the bust above my door! Take thy beak from out my heart, and take thy form from off my door!" Quoth the Raven, "Nevermore." And the Raven, never flitting, still is sitting, still is sitting On the pallid bust of Pallas just above my chamber door; And his eyes have all the seeming of a demon's that is dreaming, And the lamp-light o'er him streaming throws his shadow on the floor; And my soul from out that shadow that lies floating on the floor Shall be lifted- nevermore! 2.2 Mad Magazine Parody Example: 2.3 The Simpsons Raven clip You will experience difficulty finding a decent clip of the Raven segment from The Simpsons online. Try downloading the episode. It originally ran in the first Treehouse of Horror Halloween special, Season 2, episode 3, segment 3. 40 Experiencing Poetry 3/Part Three: Japanese Death Haiku and Butoh Dance of Darkness 3.1 Famous Japanese Death Poetry Ōta Dōkan, 1432-1486 (warrior-poet, military tactician and Buddhist monk) Dōkan met an untimely end at a Uesiugi clan leader’s home after he was falsely accused of disloyalty during a period when the Uesugi family struggled through an internal clan conflict. Kakaru toki Had I not known sakoso inochi no that I was dead oshikarame already kanete nakimi to I would have mourned omoishirazuba the loss of my life. Basho Matsuo, 1644-1694 (famous Japanese poet, recognized today as the master of clear, concise haiku) Becoming ill and isolated in his later years, Bashō adopted the Buddhist principle of karumi or "lightness"—greeting the mundane world rather than separating himself from it. He died peacefully, surrounded by his disciples. Tabi ni yande falling sick on a journey Yume wa kareno wo my dream goes wandering Kake meguri over a field of dried grass. Taigu Ryōkan, 1758-1831 (eccentric Buddhist monk) Spending most of his life as a hermit, Ryokan lived a very simple, pure life, and is remembered for his kindness and generosity ura wo mise Now it reveals its hidden side omote wo misete and now the other—this it falls, chiru momiji an autumn leaf. 41 Experiencing Poetry 3.2 Other Jisei (Death Poem) Examples Atsujin Earth and metal... although my breathing ceases time and tide go on. Baiko Plum petals falling I look up...the sky, a clear crisp moon. Chiboku The running stream is cool...the pebbles underfoot. Chirin In earth and sky no grain of dust... snow on the foothills. Chogo I long for people... then again I loathe them: end of autumn. Enryo Autumn waters of this world wake me from my drunkenness. Fuso Upon the lotus flower morning dew is thinning out. Gansan Blow if you will, fall wind...the flowers have all faded. Ginka I leap from depths of debt into the skies: autumn of the dragon. Tsuchi kane ya iki wa taete mo tsukihi ari Chiru ume ni miaguru sora no tsuki kiyoshi Yuku mizu to tomo ni suzushiku ishi kawa ya Ametsuchi ni chiri naki yuki no fumoto kana Hito koishi hito mutsukashishi aki no kure Yoizame no kore ya konoyo no aki no mizu Asatsuyu no usura kiekeri hasu no hana Fukaba fuke hana wa sunda zo aki no kaze Shakusen no fuchi kara tenjo tatsu no aki 42 Experiencing Poetry 3.3 Butoh article written by Morita Itto, Butoh dancer http://www.ne.jp/asahi/butoh/itto/goosay/boston06/zero-arrow/p2.jpg 43 Experiencing Poetry 4/Part Four: Suicide and Seppuku 4.1: “Born This Way” by Lady Gaga; Lyrics It doesn't matter if you love him, Subway kid, rejoice your truth or capital H-I-M In the religion of the insecure Just put your paws up I must be myself, respect my youth 'cause you were born this way, baby A different lover is not a sin My mama told me when I was young Believe capital H-I-M (Hey hey hey) We are all born superstars I love my life I love this record and She rolled my hair and put my lipstick on Mi amore vole fe yah (Love needs faith) In the glass of her boudoir Don't be a drag, just be a queen "There's nothing wrong with loving who you are" Whether you're broke or evergreen She said, "'Cause he made you perfect, babe" You're black, white, beige, chola descent "So hold your head up girl and you'll go far, You're Lebanese, you're orient Listen to me when I say" Whether life's disabilities Left you outcast, bullied, or teased I'm beautiful in my way Rejoice and love yourself today 'Cause God makes no mistakes 'cause baby you were born this way I'm on the right track, baby I was born this way No matter gay, straight, or bi, Don't hide yourself in regret Lesbian, transgendered life, Just love yourself and you're set I'm on the right track baby, I'm on the right track, baby I was born to survive. I was born this way No matter black, white or beige Chola or orient made, Oh there ain't no other way I'm on the right track baby, Baby I was born this way I was born to be brave. Baby I was born this way Oh there ain't no other way I was born this way hey! Baby I was born this way I'm on the right track baby I'm on the right track, baby I was born this way hey! I was born this way I'm on the right track baby I was born this way hey! Don't be a drag just be a queen [x3] Don't be! Same DNA, but born this way. Same DNA, but born this way. Give yourself prudence And love your friends 44 Experiencing Poetry 4.2: Thinking Music Map In the centre circle, write the title of the song. In the surrounding circles, write words, phrases, or draw pictures which describe how the music and lyrics we listen to make you feel. Meaning images that go through your head, words that stick out to you, or emotions you may experience. 45 Experiencing Poetry 4.3: Emo music article May 8, 2008 11:04 Emo music attacked over teen suicide Genre blasted again after 13 year-old 'emo girl' commits suicide An inquest in Maidstone has heard that Hannah Bond, a 13 year-old girl from Kent, committed suicide by hanging herself - and emo music has been blamed. Roger Sykes, the coroner who gave the verdict of suicide yesterday (May 7), suggested that the fact that Bond was an obsessive fan of such music was linked to her death. The inquest heard that Bond had discussed with friends the "glamour" of suicide, and was obsessed with American band My Chemical Romance. She had a picture of an emo girl with bloody wrists on her Bebo page. Bond's father Ray explained that his daughter had had an episode of self-harm prior to her suicide, which she told him was an emo initiation ceremony. Her mother Heather also provided some background on her interest in the genre explaining: "There are [emo] websites that show pink teddies hanging themselves. She called emo a fashion and I thought it was normal. Hannah was a normal girl. She had loads of friends. She could be a bit moody but I thought it was just because she was a teenager." However as he gave the verdict of suicide, coroner Sykes criticised the genre saying: "The emo overtones concerning death and associating it with glamour I find very disturbing." -http://www.nme.com /news/various-artists/36468 4.4 “Adam’s Song” by Blink-182; Lyrics I never thought I'd die alone I laughed the loudest who'd have known I traced the cord back to the wall No wonder it was never plugged in at all I took my time, I hurried up The choice was mine, I didn't think enough I'm too depressed, to go on You'll be sorry when I'm gone I never conquered, rarely came 16 just held such better days Days when I still felt alive We couldn't wait to get outside The world was wide, too late to try The tour was over we'd survived I couldn't wait till I got home To pass the time in my room alone I never thought I'd die alone Another six months I'll be unknown Give all my things to all my friends You'll never set foot in my room again You'll close it off, board it up Remember the time that I spilled the cup Of apple juice in the hall Please tell mom this is not her fault 46 Experiencing Poetry I never conquered, rarely came 16 just held such better days Days when I still felt alive We couldn't wait to get outside The world was wide, too late to try The tour was over we'd survived I couldn't wait till I got home To pass the time in my room alone I never conquered, rarely came Tomorrow holds such better days Days when I can still feel alive When I can't wait to get outside The world is wide, the time goes by The tour is over, I'd survived I can't wait till I get home To pass the time in my room alone 4.5 The Laughing Heart by Charles Bukowski your life is your life don’t let it be clubbed into dank submission. be on the watch. there are ways out. there is a light somewhere. it may not be much light but it beats the darkness. be on the watch. the gods will offer you chances. know them. take them. you can’t beat death but you can beat death in life, sometimes. and the more often you learn to do it, the more light there will be. your life is your life. know it while you have it. you are marvellous the gods wait to delight in you. 47 Experiencing Poetry 5/Part Five: Grief and Mourning 5.1 “Candle in the Wind” (original) by Elton John; Lyrics Goodbye Norma Jean Though I never knew you at all You had the grace to hold yourself While those around you crawled They crawled out of the woodwork And they whispered into your brain They set you on the treadmill And they made you change your name chorus And it seems to me you lived your life Like a candle in the wind Never knowing who to cling to When the rain set in And I would have liked to have known you But I was just a kid Your candle burned out long before Your legend ever did Loneliness was tough The toughest role you ever played Hollywood created a superstar And pain was the price you paid Even when you died Oh the press still hounded you All the papers had to say Was that Marilyn was found in the nude [repeat chorus] Goodbye Norma Jean Though I never knew you at all You had the grace to hold yourself While those around you crawled Goodbye Norma Jean From the young man in the 22nd row Who sees you as something more than sexual More than just our Marilyn Monroe 5.2 “Candle in the Wind 1997” by Elton John; Lyrics Goodbye England's rose May you ever grow in our hearts You were the grace that placed itself Where lives were torn apart You called out to our country And you whispered to those in pain Now you belong to heaven And the stars spell out your name chorus And it seems to me you lived your life Like a candle in the wind Never fading with the sunset When the rain set in And your footsteps will always fall here Along England's greenest hills Your candle's burned out long before Your legend ever will Loveliness we've lost These empty days without your smile This torch we'll always carry For our nation's golden child And even though we try The truth brings us to tears All our words cannot express The joy you brought us through the years [repeat chorus] Goodbye England's rose May you ever grow in our hearts You were the grace that placed itself Where lives were torn apart Goodbye England's rose From a country lost without your soul Who'll miss the wings of your compassion More than you'll ever know 48 Experiencing Poetry 5.3 Catholic Church bans pop music article Australia's Catholic church bans pop songs at funerals Football club songs and pop or rock music have been banned from funerals in Catholic churches in Australia under new guidelines distributed this week to priests and funeral directors. A funeral should not be a "celebration" of the deceased's life, Archbishop of Melbourne Denis Hart said in the rules, but a final sacred farewell. Celebrations of that life should be held at social occasions before or after the funeral, he said. "The wishes of the deceased, family and friends should be taken into account ... but in planning the liturgy, the celebrant should moderate any tendency to turn the funeral into a secular celebration of the life of the deceased," the guidelines state. "Secular items are never to be sung or played at a Catholic funeral, such as romantic ballads, pop or rock music, political songs, football club songs." Some funeral directors, however, said the directive was insensitive to relatives' needs as many grieving families wanted to incorporate multimedia presentations, including photographs and video of the deceased person's life as well as music. "Funerals have become a celebration of people's lives and there aren't many that don't include a DVD presentation," John Fowler, the general manager of Le Pine Funerals, told Melbourne's Herald Sun newspaper. "It really gives you a sense of the joy that this person has brought to the world." Pop songs have become more common at funerals as new technology allows churches and funeral parlors to install sound systems and more people opt for services conducted by celebrants instead of religious ministers. Centennial Park, a leading provider of cemetery, crematorium and memorial services in Australia, in 2008 compiled a list of the 10 most popular songs at Australian funerals. The top song was Frank Sinatra's version of "My Way," followed by "Wonderful World" by Louis Armstrong, "Time To Say Goodbye" by Andrea Bocelli and Sarah Brightman, and "Unforgettable" by Nat "King" Cole. Rounding out the top 10 were "The Wind Beneath My Wings" by Bette Midler, "Amazing Grace," "We'll Meet Again" by Vera Lynn, "Over the Rainbow" by Judy Garland, "Abide With Me" by Harry Secombe, and "Danny Boy." The list of top 10 most popular unusual funeral songs included listed as Queen's "Another One Bites the Dust," AC/DC's "Highway to Hell, "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life" by Monty Python, and "Ding Dong the Witch is Dead" from "The Wizard of Oz." http://www.reuters.com/article/2010/09/10/us-funerals-idUSTRE6890WP20100910 49 Experiencing Poetry 5.4 Purpose of Poetry article Beyond Grief and Grievance: The poetry of 9/11 and its aftermath. By Philip Metres (extracted from http://www.poetryfoundation.org/article/242580) It was my second week as a newly-minted professor in the Midwest, September 11, 2001, and I hustled to complete a lecture on imagery when my wife called. All I could think was, “why is she calling me ten minutes before I have to teach?”—something about a plane crash something something New York—and then, “why do I need to know this before class?” I hung up, and returned to the poem before me, Carolyn Forché’s “The Colonel.” By the time I arrived in the classroom, after hearing the full extent of the morning’s events, I could barely get through the poem without breaking down in tears. It wasn’t just the bag of ears that the Colonel pours across his opulent table. It’s the violence at the perimeters of vision—the filed nails of the daughter, the moon hanging on a cord, the house surrounded by a wall of broken bottles, the gratings on the window, even the rack of lamb. The poem works not merely by intimating torture, but by decorating it so uncannily like homes in our own country. In the home of Forché’s Colonel, an American cop show plays on television, and a maid serves a delectable spread. Forché’s poem, in its raw confrontation, jolts us awake to the violence of privilege. But that’s what made it so difficult to teach on that day. What was 9/11 but the end of the fantasy of our separateness, our invulnerability? The events of 9/11 occasioned a tremendous outpouring of poetry; people in New York taped poems on windows, wheatpasted them on posts, and shared them by hand. In Curtis Fox’s words, “poetry was suddenly everywhere in the city.” Outside the immediate radius of what became known as “ground zero,” aided by email, listserves, websites, and, later, blogs, thousands of people also shared poems they loved, and poems they had written. By February, 2002, over 25,000 poems written in response to 9/11 had been published on poems.com alone. Three years later, the number of poems there had more than doubled. Often invisible in American culture, poetry suddenly became relevant, even—and perhaps dangerously—useful. People turned to poems when other forms failed to give shape to their feelings. Some of these poems, certainly, employed the language of faith, a faith that has often been mobilized as a weapon of grievance. Some were desperately angry, in the way Toby Keith’s “Courtesy of the Red, White, and Blue (The Angry American)” promises to put a “boot in the ass” of those that “messed” with the U.S. of A. In Cleveland, I recall hearing some rather salty Osama limericks involving his mama. Of course, poems that take on subjects as public and iconic as the attacks of September 11th risk not only devolving into cliché and hysterical jingoism, but also, even when most well-meaning, perpetuating the violence of terror, and the violence of grievance and revenge, as mass media did by endlessly replaying images of the planes exploding into the World Trade Center towers. Likewise, when we read enough 9/11 poems, we become awash in falling people, planes described as birds, flaming towers of Babel, ash and angels, angels and ash. The mythic nature of this attack, this disaster—echoing everything from the tower of Babel to the fall of Icarus—is undeniable, and the acts of heroism and the brute loss of so many makes it difficult to find adequate words, even for our most accomplished poets. 50 Experiencing Poetry In a riposte to John Lundberg’s 2010 essay on the Huffington Post, “Remembering 9/11 Through Poetry,” one commenter acidly posted: “isn’t 9/11 bad enough without adding poetry to it?” The commenter known as “Zymos” may just be a poetry-hater, but he also has a point, made more articulately by Theodor Adorno, that “to write lyric poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric.” Adorno reflects on the dangers of art to render traumatic events too easily understandable, too easily commodifiable. In his essay, “Commitment,” Adorno extends his original critique, saying that by turning suffering into images, harsh and uncompromising though they are, it wounds the shame we feel in the presence of the victims. For these victims are used to create something, works of art, that are thrown to the consumption of a world which destroyed them….The moral of this art, not to forget for a single instant, slithers into the abyss of its opposite. The aesthetic principle of stylization, and even the solemn prayer of the chorus, make an unthinkable fate appear to have had some meaning; it is transfigured, something of its horror removed. This alone does an injustice to the victims; yet no art which tried to evade them could confront the claims of justice. But we cannot be silent. So between the Scylla of cliché and the Charybdis of exploitation, poetry moves. Martín Espada’s “Alabanza: In Praise of Local 100,” for example, offers a globalist ode to the workers on the restaurant at the top of the World Trade Center who perished in the attacks. By focusing on people often unnoticed, sometimes undocumented, and occasionally disparaged, Espada celebrates the diverse gathering of humanity that the American project has enabled, and that the attacks threatened to separate, in the rhetoric of security and the ideology of fear. Read ‘Alabanza: In Praise of Local 100’ by Martin Espada in your 9/11 Poetry Pack (see Appendices 5.5) The poem’s concluding lines brings the victims of war—from the 9/11 victims to the victims of war in Afghanistan—into conversation again. Perhaps the best response to Adorno’s legitimate concerns is that “music is all we have.” Nobel Prize-winning Polish poet Wisława Szymborska also manages to avoid the troubling possibility of art’s exploitation for easy (and false) transcendence, in her poem “Photograph from September 11. Read ‘Photograph from September 11’ by Wislawa Szmborska in your 9/11 Poetry Pack. Szymborska takes the photograph of the so-called “falling man” and uses it as a monument to our elegiac desire to freeze the beloved in the moments before death. By not adding a last line and by not giving the poem its expected (and easy) closure, Szymborska keeps the work open, the wound fresh. Not all worthwhile 9/11 poetry reflected such ambiguity, though. It would be strange to talk about poetry and 9/11 and not mention Amiri Baraka’s scandal-making and splenetic “Somebody Blew Up America,” published in 2002. At the time, Baraka held the post of New Jersey’s poet laureate, and his poem caused an outcry principally for perpetuating an Internet myth that 4000 Israelis were told to stay home from work at the Twin Towers on September 11, and secondarily for its anti-imperialist rant against the United States and figures of the Bush Administration. His subsequent defense of the poem, an essay called “I Will Not ‘Apologize,’ I Will Not ‘Resign,’” did not do the work any favors; rather than arguing that the poem is the dramatized utterance of a suppressed but necessary point of view—that of the anti-imperialist scourge—Baraka asserts his absolute identification with the poem’s rhetoric. 51 Experiencing Poetry The poem may be smarter than the poet’s argument on its behalf. Emerging from an event which has ignited as many conspiracy theories as JFK’s assassination, “Somebody Blew Up America” enacts the intoxification of conspiracy-theorizing itself. Conspiracy theory, spastic groping after fact and reason, comes out of the fantasy of absolute governmental power. While the poem’s catalogue of imperial atrocity is mostly documentable (with the glaring exception being Israeli and American administration complicity in the attacks), the desire to place all the blame on a singular “Somebody” dramatizes the weakness of a totalizing critique of empire. Read ‘Somebody Blew Up America’ by Amiri Baraka in your 9/11 Poetry Pack. The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 compelled me to rethink everything I thought I knew, and made me want to learn more, to read outside whatever borders I had created for myself. Not to be more American, but to be a better citizen, a better denizen of the planet. To go global and be local, to go ancient and be modern, to question all certainties and embrace what I did not know, to read Rumi and Isaiah, Rushdie and Roy and even Al-Qaeda, to listen to Springsteen and Kulthum, to refuse the elixir of fundamentalisms, to translate and be translated again by what I could not yet understand. To tattoo "Oye" on my body. To listen. 5.5 Three Different 9/11 Poems 1) ‘Alabanza’ by Martín Espada Alabanza. Praise the cook with a shaven head and a tattoo on his shoulder that said Oye, a blue-eyed Puerto Rican with people from Fajardo, the harbor of pirates centuries ago. Praise the lighthouse in Fajardo, candle glimmering white to worship the dark saint of the sea. Alabanza. Praise the cook’s yellow Pirates cap worn in the name of Roberto Clemente, his plane that flamed into the ocean loaded with cans for Nicaragua, for all the mouths chewing the ash of earthquakes. Alabanza. Praise the kitchen radio, dial clicked even before the dial on the oven, so that music and Spanish rose before bread. Praise the bread. Alabanza. Praise Manhattan from a hundred and seven flights up, like Atlantis glimpsed through the windows of an ancient aquarium. Praise the great windows where immigrants from the kitchen could squint and almost see their world, hear the chant of nations: Ecuador, México, Republica Dominicana, Haiti, Yemen, Ghana, Bangladesh. Alabanza. Praise the kitchen in the morning, where the gas burned blue on every stove and exhaust fans fired their diminutive propellers, hands cracked eggs with quick thumbs or sliced open cartons to build an altar of cans. Alabanza. Praise the busboy’s music, the chime-chime of his dishes and silverware in the tub. 52 Experiencing Poetry Alabanza. Praise the dish-dog, the dishwasher who worked that morning because another dishwasher could not stop coughing, or because he needed overtime to pile the sacks of rice and beans for a family floating away on some Caribbean island plagued by frogs. Alabanza. Praise the waitress who heard the radio in the kitchen and sang to herself about a man gone. Alabanza. After the thunder wilder than thunder, after the shudder deep in the glass of the great windows, after the radio stopped singing like a tree full of terrified frogs, after night burst the dam of day and flooded the kitchen, for a time the stoves glowed in darkness like the lighthouse in Fajardo, like a cook’s soul. Soul I say, even if the dead cannot tell us about the bristles of God’s beard because God has no face, soul I say, to name the smoke-beings flung in constellations across the night sky of this city and cities to come. Alabanza I say, even if God has no face. Alabanza. When the war began, from Manhattan and Kabul two constellations of smoke rose and drifted to each other, mingling in icy air, and one said with an Afghan tongue: Teach me to dance. We have no music here. And the other said with a Spanish tongue: I will teach you. Music is all we have. 2) ‘Photograph from September 11’ by Wislawa Szmborska They jumped from the burning floors— one, two, a few more, higher, lower. The photograph halted them in life, and now keeps them above the earth toward the earth. Each is still complete, with a particular face and blood well hidden. There’s enough time for hair to come loose, for keys and coins to fall from pockets. They’re still within the air’s reach, within the compass of places that have just now opened. I can do only two things for them— describe this flight and not add a last line. They jumped from the burning floors— one, two, a few more, higher, lower. The photograph halted them in life, and now keeps them above the earth toward the earth. Each is still complete, with a particular face and blood well hidden. There’s enough time for hair to come loose, for keys and coins to fall from pockets. 53 Experiencing Poetry They’re still within the air’s reach, within the compass of places that have just now opened. I can do only two things for them— describe this flight and not add a last line 3) ‘Somebody Blew Up America’ by Amiri Baraka (All thinking people oppose terrorism both domestic & international… But one should not be used To cover the other) They say its some terrorist, some barbaric A Rab, in Afghanistan It wasn't our American terrorists It wasn't the Klan or the Skin heads Or the them that blows up nigger Churches, or reincarnates us on Death Row It wasn't Trent Lott Or David Duke or Giuliani Or Schundler, Helms retiring It wasn't the gonorrhea in costume the white sheet diseases That have murdered black people Terrorized reason and sanity Most of humanity, as they pleases They say (who say? Who do the saying Who is them paying Who tell the lies Who in disguise Who had the slaves Who got the bux out the Bucks Who got the tar, who got the feathers Who had the match, who set the fires Who killed and hired Who say they God & still be the Devil Who the biggest only Who the most goodest Who do Jesus resemble Who created everything Who the smartest Who the greatest The Falling Man Who the richest Who say you ugly and they the goodlookingest Who define art Who define science Who made the bombs Who made the guns Who bought the slaves, who sold them Who called you them names Who say Dahmer wasn't insane Who/ Who / Who Who got fat from plantations Who genocided Indians Tried to waste the Black nation Who stole Puerto Rico Who stole the Indies, the Philipines, Manhattan Australia & The Hebrides Who forced opium on the Chinese Who live on Wall Street The first plantation Who cut your nuts off Who rape your ma Who lynched your pa Who own them buildings Who got the money Who think you funny Who locked you up Who own the papers 54 Experiencing Poetry Who owned the slave ship Who run the army Who own television Who own radio Who the fake president Who the ruler Who the banker Who own what ain't even known to be owned Who own the owners that ain't the real owners Who/ Who/ Who Who own the suburbs Who suck the cities Who make the laws Who own the mine Who twist your mind Who got bread Who need peace Who you think need war Who own the oil Who do no toil Who own the soil Who is not a nigger Who is so great ain't nobody bigger Who made Bush president Who believe the confederate flag need to be flying Who talk about democracy and be lying WHO/ WHO/ WHOWHO/ Who the Beast in Revelations Who 666 Who decide Jesus get crucified Who own this city Who own the air Who own the water Who own your crib Who rob and steal and cheat and murder and make lies the truth Who call you uncouth Who live in the biggest house Who do the biggest crime Who go on vacation anytime Who killed the most niggers Who killed the most Jews Who killed the most Italians Who killed the most Irish Who killed the most Africans Who killed the most Japanese Who killed the most Latinos Who/Who/Who Who own the ocean Who own the airplanes Who own the malls Who the Devil on the real side Who got rich from Armenian genocide Who the biggest terrorist Who change the bible Who killed the most people Who do the most evil Who don't worry about survival Who have the colonies Who stole the most land Who rule the world Who say they good but only do evil Who the biggest executioner Who/Who/Who Who own the oil Who want more oil Who told you what you think that later you find out a lie Who/ Who Who found Bin Laden, maybe they Satan Who pay the CIA, Who knew the bomb was gonna blow Who know why the terrorists Learned to fly in Florida, San Diego 55 Experiencing Poetry Who know why Five Israelis was filming the explosion And cracking they sides at the notion Who got rich from Algeria, Libya, Haiti, Iran, Iraq, Saudi, Kuwait, Lebanon, Syria, Egypt, Jordan, Palestine, Who need fossil fuel when the sun ain't goin' nowhere Who cut off peoples hands in the Congo Who invented Aids Who put the germs In the Indians' blankets Who thought up "The Trail of Tears" Who make the credit cards Who get the biggest tax cut Who walked out of the Conference Against Racism Who killed Malcolm, Kennedy & his Brother Who killed Dr King, Who would want such a thing? Are they linked to the murder of Lincoln? Who blew up the Maine & started the Spanish American War Who got Sharon back in Power Who backed Batista, Hitler, Bilbo, Chiang kai Chek who WHO W H O Who invaded Grenada Who made money from apartheid Who keep the Irish a colony Who overthrow Chile and Nicaragua later Who killed David Sibeko, Chris Hani, the same ones who killed Biko, Cabral, Neruda, Allende, Che Guevara, Sandino, Who killed Kabila, the ones who wasted Lumumba, Mondlane , Betty Shabazz, Princess Margaret, Ralph Featherstone, Little Bobby Who locked up Mandela, Dhoruba, Geronimo, Assata, Mumia,Garvey, Dashiell Hammett, Alphaeus Hutton Who killed Huey Newton, Fred Hampton, MedgarEvers, Mikey Smith, Walter Rodney, Was it the ones who tried to poison Fidel Who tried to keep the Vietnamese Oppressed Who put a price on Lenin's head Who put the Jews in ovens, and who helped them do it Who said "America First" and ok'd the yellow stars WHO/WHO Who killed Rosa Luxembourg, Liebneckt Who murdered the Rosenbergs And all the good people iced, tortured , assassinated, vanished Who decided Affirmative Action had to go Reconstruction, The New Deal, The New Frontier, The Great Society, Who do Tom Ass Clarence Work for Who doo doo come out the Colon's mouth Who know what kind of Skeeza is a Condoleeza Who pay Connelly to be a wooden negro Who give Genius Awards to Homo Locus Subsidere Who overthrew Nkrumah, Bishop, Who poison Robeson, who try to put DuBois in Jail Who frame Rap Jamil al Amin, Who frame the Rosenbergs, Garvey, The Scottsboro Boys, The Hollywood Ten Who set the Reichstag Fire Who knew the World Trade Center was gonna get bombed Who told 4000 Israeli workers at the Twin Towers To stay home that day Why did Sharon stay away? Who,Who, Who explosion of Owl the newspaper say the devil face cd be seen Who WHO Who WHO 56 Experiencing Poetry Who make money from war Who make dough from fear and lies Who want the world like it is Who want the world to be ruled by imperialism and national oppression and terror violence, and hunger and poverty. Who is the ruler of Hell? Who is the most powerful Who you know ever Seen God? But everybody seen The Devil Like an Owl exploding In your life in your brain in your self Like an Owl who know the devil All night, all day if you listen, Like an Owl Exploding in fire. We hear the questions rise In terrible flame like the whistle of a crazy dog Like the acid vomit of the fire of Hell Who and Who and WHO who who Whoooo and Whoooooooooooooooo 57 Experiencing Poetry Section Three - Poetry and War. Rationale Like the other units within the sequence this unit aims to use the lens of contemporary culture and song lyrics to engage students in the learning and appreciation of poetry. This series of five lessons focuses upon the theme of ‘War’. Broadly speaking each lesson consists of a ‘conventional’ poem which is set alongside a popular song which raises similar themes. Haugh (2002) writes that whilst poetry is often perceived by students and teachers alike as a ‘difficult’ area to teach it actually enjoys the benefit of being the written form with which teenagers can potentially most easily identify. Song lyrics and genres such as Hip Hop frequently employ poetic language and, more importantly, whilst few teenagers could claim to have attempted writing a novel, a large number will have either attempted song writing (or at least be capable of reciting song lyrics at length). It is upon this notion of poetic language within music/song lyrics that this unit is focused. The contention is that by drawing students’ attention to the poetic nature of song lyrics it will both engage students and serve as a scaffold into an appreciation of more ‘conventional’ poetry. Whilst each of the five lessons sets a song lyric alongside a poem, each lesson has a different focus and accompanying set of activities. The degree of self-determination/self-directed learning within each activity also accommodates varying levels of skill and literacy within the student body. All lessons are conceived and formulated with VELS standards in mind, incorporating elements of reading, writing and discussion. Given the subjective, creative nature of both the subject matter and related activities it is recommended that this unit be assessed formatively/PGO, based on both participation and completion of the assigned tasks. ( Haugh, K et al. The English Journal, Vol. 91, No. 3, Teaching and Writing Poetry (Jan., 2002), pp. 25-31 National Council of Teachers of English.) Aims - To engage students in an active appreciation of poetry and poetic language. - Students to successfully identify and understand key forms and mechanics of poetry. - Students to successfully employ these mechanics in creating poetry of their own. - Students to successfully utilise ICT and research skills. - Students to practice group work, presentation, reading and listening skills 58 Experiencing Poetry Introduction War and conflict have been recurrent themes in both music and ‘conventional’ poetry for thousands of years. Historically these accounts usually glorified war and the heroic deeds and sacrifices made by soldiers. The advent of mechanised warfare at around the time of the First World War saw a definite change of attitude within popular culture which continues into the modern era. Whilst politicians, the media and religious groups may at various times espouse the ‘necessity’ of a war, in the West at least the bulk of both poetry and music is critical of it. 1/Activity One: “War down the Ages”. This initial lesson is designed to introduce some traditional ‘heroic’ war poetry and focus upon the kinds of emotions and sentiments that such works draw upon. Both Blake and Tennyson write poetry in a ‘classic’ style and whilst their themes are dated for a modern readership their work provides a strong basis for discussion of terms such as metaphor, meter, form and repetition. Tennyson is also interesting in the sense that whilst he acknowledges the charge was a ‘blunder’ 59 Experiencing Poetry and in some ways futile, he nevertheless glorifies the soldiers heroism and sacrifice. Blake’s famous poem “Jerusalem” evokes not only patriotism and love of country but also equates these sentiments to religious righteousness. The Elvis Costello hit“Oliver’s Army” provides an interesting contrast to these poems. Taking its title from Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658) , thematically it describes the lot of both conscripted and professional soldiers through British history. Drawn largely from poor working class backgrounds the songs portraying them as pawns in a political game. When subjected to analysis as a poem Costello’s song contains many examples of language working at a ‘poetic’ level. Whilst accommodating all the aims for the unit overall, the activity in this particular lesson places emphasis upon the recognition, analysis and discussion of poetic language. Resources needed: photocopies of Blake, Tennyson and Costello, data projector/speaker, glossary sheets, Youtube link for ‘Oliver’s Army’, whiteboard maker, students to have their own pens/writing materials. Activities In terms of activities this is essentially an oral/discussion based class with some provision for written answers. Hand out the lyric sheets and then using the Youtube link watch the clip of “Oliver’s Army”. Costello’s use of irony and suggestion means that the message of the song will take some discussion/consideration. Read the lyrics aloud and use the glossary sheets to help guide the students through unfamiliar terms. Identify poetic use of language within the song and discuss its possible meaning(s). Emphasise questioning rather than lecturing in your teaching practice. Repeat the process with Blake and Tennyson. Whilst specific language is important (and should be considered) emphasise the overall sense of the poem and do not get too bogged down in poetical technicalities. The idea is for students to read and analyse the poem in much the same way as they would a song lyric. The glossary sheet can be used to introduce some of the terms but simply fill them out as terms arise in discussion – they are merely an aid and do not need to be filled out exhaustively. Written Task. Having discussed each poem individually ask the students to provide written answers the following questions (written on the whiteboard). Discussion Questions . • • Question 1 – Identify forms or types of language are use by all three writers? Give examples. Question 2 - Identify forms of language are unique to or emphasised by specific works? 60 Experiencing Poetry • • Question 3 - Who might the intended audience be for each of the works? Question 4 - How is heroism portrayed in the earlier poems as opposed to Costello? Before the next lesson… Prior to the end of the class let the students know that the coming lesson will be concentrate upon songs and poems that relate to World War One and that they should spend 15mins investigating WW1 on the internet and be able to define the term ‘trench warfare’. 61 Experiencing Poetry 2/Activity Two – The First World War. Described contemporarily as the ‘War to end all Wars’ and ‘The Great War’, World War One was the first war of the modern era. Both the impact of mechanised weaponry and its geographic extent made it a traumatic, devastating event for millions. This trauma was reflected in the poetry of the era which began to depart from the ‘heroic’ tenor of poets such as Tennyson and Blake. Wilfred Owen is one of the most noted of the WWI poets and his work is a powerful critique of that conflict. “Anthem for a Doomed Youth” is perhaps his most famous poem and both its brevity and language make it accessible to a teenage readership. The sense of disillusionment and despair found in Owen’s poem is echoed in the tune “Buddy Can You Spare Me a Dime?” – a fitting companion work both thematically and in terms of language. Whilst attempting to accommodate all the overall aims , the activity in this lesson places particular emphasis upon recognition of the parallels that exist between poetry and song/lyric writing. Students are asked to identify the themes and issues dealt with in Owen’s poem and then express these in a more familiar form of language. The brevity and relatively simple message of Owen’s poem make it a suitable vehicle for the “re-telling” that is the main activity in this lesson. Resources needed: photocopies of ‘Anthem for Doomed Youth” and “Buddy Can You Spare Me a Dime”, data projector/speaker, glossary sheets, Youtube link for Tom Waits ‘ “Buddy Can You Spare Me a Dime?”, whiteboard maker, glossary sheets (from previous lesson) ,students to have their own pens/writing materials. 62 Experiencing Poetry Activities Open the lesson by discussing the task set at the close of the previous lesson (investigating the First World War and defining the term “trench warfare.” Watch/listen to “Buddy Can You Spare Me a Dime”, Hand out the song lyrics and then discuss the following with the class. • • • • Question 1 – who is the subject in the song and what have his experiences been? Question 2 - what are some of the underlying themes of the song? Question 3- what are some of the examples of poetic language in the song? How do they add to its impact? Question 4 – How does the musical composition/instrumentation of the song affect our perception of the lyrics? Now hand out and read aloud ‘Anthem for Doomed Youth” by Wilfred Owen. Discuss the following. • • Question 1 – what are the underlying themes of the poem? What is Owen trying to convey? Question 2 - what is the significance of the various images that Owen uses in this poem? Song Writing Task. Divide the class into groups of 3-4. Having read and discussed both pieces students will work in groups to write or “re-tell” their own version of Owens “Anthem for Doomed Youth” in song form. This may take the form of a pop tune, hip-hop rhyme etc. Students can creatively interpret and extrapolate upon the content of “Anthem” but the key images and themes should be present (funeral imagery, church bells/service etc). They may also choose to use pictures, mp3’s or musical instruments to perform their piece. (Being a group assignment, assessment of this piece will be PGO based upon completion and participation in the activity). Before the next lesson… If students have not yet completed the task in class then they will need to work together at home (or over the net) to finish their song in preparation for performance at the start of next lesson. Students will also need to prepare any musical or visual component they wish to add to their piece. 63 Experiencing Poetry 3/Activity Three: “The Vietnam War”. At the beginning of this lesson students will perform the task set in the previous class. Having done so we will move onto the theme of the Vietnam War and a new activity. “I was only 19” was a highly successful Hip Hop single by Australian group ‘The Herd’ whilst Bruce Dawe’s poem “Weapon Training” is the most stylised/contemporary of the poems that the students have read to this point, and potentially the most challenging in terms of analysis. Both pieces are alike in that they are written in the form of first person dialogue and make extensive use of phonic devices such as repetition, alliteration and onomatopoeia. They are also alike in that whilst they make some use of rhyme it is less explicit that in the poems studied previously. The physicality and immediacy of this type of work is the focus for this particular lesson. Resources needed: photocopies of “I was only 19” and “Weapons Training”, data projector/speaker, glossary sheets, Youtube link for The Herd’s “I was Only 19”, whiteboard maker, glossary sheets (from previous lesson), students will need internet access. Activities. The lesson will commence with group performances from the previous activity. Whilst the performances are not formally assessed offer commentary and feedback with particular attention to the types of language they have chosen to use. Rely on peer feedback as much as possible. 64 Experiencing Poetry Once concluded, use the data projector to watch The Herd’s version of “I was Only 19”. Hand out the song lyrics. Discussion Questions (oral) • Question 1 - How is language/speech rhythm used in this piece to create tension and momentum? • Question 2 - Who is telling the story and how does the use of the first person position us as an audience? • Question 3 - identify examples of onomatopoeia, repetition and alliteration (be sure to define these terms on the ongoing glossary sheet if you have not already done so). • Question 4 – What are the central themes and ideas in this piece? • Question 5 – How does the musical composition/instrumentation of the song affect our perception of the lyrics? Now hand out and read aloud Bruce Dawe’s “Weapons Training” and repeat the discussion process. Discussion Questions (oral) • Question 1 - How is language/speech rhythm used in this piece to create tension and momentum? • Question 2 - Who is telling the story and how does the use of the first person position us as an audience? • Question 3 - identify examples of onomatopoeia, repetition and alliteration. • Question 4 – What are the central themes and ideas in this piece? Comic book poem. Having discussed concepts such as onomatopoeia, repetition and alliteration students will now attempt to write a short poem based upon these concepts. Using the internet (or a comic book of their own) students will choose a comic strip that contains examples of the above devices. They then need to write this out separately. In the example above this would be “ratatt, ratta-tatta, wham and pat pat”. The students then consider the narrative of the comic they have chosen and ‘retell’ the story in the first person incorporating the onomatopoeic language they have identified. They may choose to use the exisiting dialogue as a basis for this or devise their own. When working with students emphasise the phonic nature of this type of writing and encourage use of repetition, alliteration etc. Before the next lesson… Students to complete poems as homework and submit along with the cartoon strip upon which their poem is based. 65 Experiencing Poetry 4/Activity Four: “Contemporary War: Iraq”. The two works in this unit are diametrically opposed to one another stylistically but share the common, contemporary theme of the war in Iraq. Unlike the earlier units every student will have been exposed extensively with this subject matter in the media, internet and in popular culture. For this reason I have chosen to juxtapose a US perspective on the conflict (the Beastie Boy’s “In A World Gone Mad”) with a work by Iraqi poet Saady Yossuf. Whilst the Beastie Boy’s song offers a critique of George Bush and the hipocracy of the US governments action, Yossuf’s beautifully constructed poem places the Iraq war in a historical context – one in a long line of wars in a region that has long been subjected to conflict. Yossuf’s poem is both reflective and expository in style and is interesting in terms of its physical lay out, its spaciousness (and fatalism) in direct contrast to the urgency of “In a World Gone Mad”. The activity in this piece emphasises the role of written layout and punctuation in a poem and how this can effect our perception of the piece. Resources needed: photocopies of “Postcards from Hajj Omran” and “In a World Gone Mad”, data projector/speaker, glossary sheets, Youtube link for The Beastie Boys’ ”In a World Gone Mad”, whiteboard maker, glossary sheets (from previous lesson), students will need individual access to a word processor. 66 Experiencing Poetry Activities. Use the data projector to watch the clip of The Beastie Boys’ “In a World Gone Mad”. Hand out the song lyrics Discussion Questions (oral) • Question 1 - How is language/speech rhythm used in this piece to create tension and momentum? • Question 2 - What are the key themes and contentions of the song? How would you describe its tone overall? • Question 3 - How is the writer trying to persuade or position us as the reader? • Question 4 – How does the musical composition/instrumentation of the song affect our perception of the lyrics? Now hand out and read aloud Saady Yossuf’s “Postcards from Hajj Omran (sharing reading between students). Discussion Questions (oral) • Question 1 - How is language/speech rhythm used in this piece to create tension and momentum? How does the spacing of the written text effect our perception of it? • Question 2 - What are the key themes and contentions of the poem? How does it vary in tone and impact compared to “In a World Gone Mad”? • Question 3 - How is Yossuf relating to the reader/audience? How is the audience positioned in relation to the poem/poet compared to “In a World Gone Mad”? “Scrambled Text” (Short activity) This is an individual written/oral task that explores how the physical spacing and layout of a poem can effect its impact in relation to notions such as meaning, emphasis, tone and pace. • Working individually the internet students find lyrics to a song that they know. • Students cut and paste the lyric into a word document, deleting all punctuation and ‘returns’ so that the lyric forms a single block of text. • Swapping computers students now re-write the lyric/text, inserting punctuation and line ends where they like. Encourage creativity in terms of spacing and the physical appearance of the poem. • Pick volunteers from the class to read their lyric aloud and if possible use the data projector to project their edit of the lyric. • Now use Youtube/the data projector to compare it to the original version of the song. 67 Experiencing Poetry Before the next lesson… Prior to the end of the class let the students know that the coming lesson will concentrate upon songs and poems that relate to Northern Ireland. In preparation they should spend 15mins investigating on the internet and be able to define the term ‘IRA’, ‘Bloody Sunday’ and describe a little of the history of the region. 68 Experiencing Poetry 5/Activity Five: “Northern Ireland”. The final unit within this sequence focuses upon Northern Ireland and its history of Protestant/Catholic based violence. Heaney’s poem reveals how simple things, such as a coal sack or an apron, can convey emotional weight and poetic significance. "Two Lorries" takes the romantic innocence of a coalman's truck, circa 1940, with its driver who stops to flirt with the poet's mother, and measures it against a present-day "heavier, deadlier one, set to explode." The poem itself merges past memories of his own mother with the contemporary bombing of a bus station (in Magherafelt 1993). The poem is quite sophisticated in that it is set in both past and present and manages to capture both lyrical/romantic tradition of Irish culture along with the country’s long history of internal division and violence. U2’s “Sunday Bloody Sunday” (1983) is an anthemic protest song that is a response to the events of “Bloody Sunday” in Derry in 1972 when 26 unarmed protestors were shot by British soldiers. The language used in U2’s song is far less sophisticated than Heamus’ poem and yet is extremely effective as a protest piece. Both works make use of sentimental imagery and language to affect the audience and make a political statement. This last lesson focuses on the broader notion of the poet/writer/artist as a member of society and the contribution they make to a society and its identity. It also encourages students to consider the role of protest/political poetry and the types of language an artist might employ to persuade his/her audience. This closing unit also encourages students to consider whether poetry is exclusively the domain of poets, or whether poetic language can find its way into everyday language and culture. 69 Experiencing Poetry Resources needed: photocopies of “Sunday Bloody Sunday” and “Two Lorries”, data projector/speaker, glossary sheets, Youtube link for U2’s ”Sunday Bloody Sunday”, Youtube link for Martin Luther King’s”I have a dream” speech, whiteboard maker, glossary sheets (from previous lesson), students will need individual access to a word processor. Activities Watch the Youtube clip of U2’s “Sunday Bloody Sunday”. Ask students if any of them can explain the historical events around which the song is based. Hand out the song lyrics. Discussion Questions. • Question 1 - What are the recurring images in the song? • Question 2 – How does the musical composition/instrumentation of the song affect our perception of the lyrics? • Question 3 - Identify some of the more emotive/sentimental lyrics within the song. • Question 4 - Identify how the song uses language and repetition to make its point. • Question 5 – What are the key themes of the song? How is the writer appealing to us as an audience? Hand out and read aloud Seamus Heaney’s “Two Lorries”. Discussion Questions. • Question 1 - What are the recurring images in the poem? • Question 2 – How does the language used differ from “Sunday Bloody Sunday”? How is it alike? How does Heaney use language and structure to set the tone of his poem? • Question 3 - Identify some of the emotive/sentimental imagery within the poem. • Question 4 - When/where is the poem set? What is it about? • Question 5 – What are the key themes of the poem? Debate. Divide the class into two groups to debate the issue: “Should writers/creative artists also be political activists?”. Group #1 must argue “Yes, writers have an obligation to be political activists and try to improve the world ” … Group #2 must argue “No, writers should not also be political activists, and they have no obligation to do so”. Conduct the debate. As a class, discuss– “Who are some writers/creative people who have changed the world in some way?”. Ask students to consider “what is the role of the poet/writer or artist in our society”? Should writers/artists try and “change the world”? Do they have that power? Conclude the lesson by watching Martin Luther King’s “I have a dream” speech. Discussion. • Is this merely a political speech or does the language used make it something else as well? • What poetic elements and devices can you identify in the speech? 70 Experiencing Poetry • How effective is this speech as a work of art? How does the speech seek to position and influence the audience and how persuasive is it in doing so? 71 Experiencing Poetry Appendices for Section Three “Poetry and War”. Activity One appendices. POETRY – GLOSSARY TERM DEFINITION ALLITERATION ASSONANCE BALLAD COUPLET ELEGY ENJAMBEMENT FEMININE RHYME HYPERBOLE IMAGERY 72 Experiencing Poetry LIMERICK LYRIC MASCULINE RHYME METAPHOR NARRATIVE ODE ONOMATOPOEIA PERSONIFICATION RHYME SIMILE SONNET STANZA 73 Experiencing Poetry SYMBOL Oliver’s Army http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uVwrrkt22Ag Don't start me talking I could talk all night My mind goes sleepwalking While I'm putting the world to right Called careers information Have you got yourself an occupation CHORUS: Oliver's army is here to stay Oliver's army are on their way And I would rather be anywhere else But here today There was a checkpoint charlie He didn't crack a smile But it's no laughing party When you've been on the murder mile Only takes one itchy trigger One more widow, one less white nigger CHORUS Hong Kong is up for grabs London is full of arabs We could be in palestine Overrun by a chinese line With the boys from the mersey and the thames and the tyne But there's no danger It's a professional career Though it could be arranged With just a word in Mr. Churchill's ear If you're out of luck you're out of work We could send you to Johannesburg CHORUS And I would rather be anywhere else But here today And I would rather be anywhere else But here today Elvis Costello. 74 Experiencing Poetry Charge of the Light Brigade Half a league, half a league, Half a league onward, All in the valley of Death Rode the six hundred. `Forward, the Light Brigade! Charge for the guns!' he said: Into the valley of Death Rode the six hundred. `Forward, the Light Brigade!' Was there a man dismay'd? Not tho' the soldier knew one had blunder'd: Their's not to make reply, Their's not to reason why, Their's but to do and die: Into the valley of Death Rode the six hundred. Cannon to right of them, Cannon to left of them, Cannon in front of them Volley'd and thunder'd; Storm'd at with shot and shell, Boldly they rode and well, Into the jaws of Death, Into the mouth of Hell Rode the six hundred. Flash'd all their sabres bare, Flash'd as they turn'd in air Sabring the gunners there, Charging an army, while All the world wonder'd: Plunged in the battery-smoke Right thro' the line they broke; Cossack and Russian Reel'd from the sabre-stroke. Alfred Lord Tennyson 75 Experiencing Poetry Activity Two appendices. Buddy can you spare me a dime? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0I8-CbJYGMA&feature=related Once I built a railroad, made it run, Made it race against time; Once I build a railroad -- now it's done. Brother, can you spare a dime? Once I built a tower to the sun, Brick and rivet and lime; Once I build a tower -- now it's done. Brother, can you spare a dime? Bridge: Once, in khaki suits, gee, we looked swell, Full of that Yankee Doodle de-dum; Half a million boots went sloggin' through Hell -I was the kid with the drum. Say, don't you remember, they called me Al? It was Al all the time. Say, don't you remember? I'm your pal. Buddy can you spare a dime? Words & Music by E.Y. Harburg & Jay Gorney - Recorded by Bing Crosby, 1932 Anthem For Doomed Youth What passing-bells for these who die as cattle? --Only the monstrous anger of the guns. Only the stuttering rifles' rapid rattle Can patter out their hasty orisons. No mockeries for them from prayers or bells, Nor any voice of mourning save the choirs,The shrill, demented choirs of wailing shells; And bugles calling for them from sad shires. What candles may be held to speed them all? Not in the hands of boys, but in their eyes Shall shine the holy glimmers of goodbyes. The pallor of girls' brows shall be their pall; Their flowers the tenderness of silent minds, And each slow dusk a drawing-down of blinds. Wilfred Owen (1893-1918) 76 Experiencing Poetry Activity Three Appendices. I Was Only 19 Mum, Dad and Denny were some amongst many who turned up to see the passing out parade at Puckapunyal Seemed every man and his mongrel watched cadets stumble on the long march to the Viet jungle. 'Oh Christ', I mumbled as I drew that card and my mates came to slap me on the back with due regard We were the sixth battalion and the next to tour we did Canungra and Shoalwater before we left, rest assured Seemed half of Townsville turned out to see us leave and they lined the footpaths as we marched to the quay The papers wrote it up like you would not believe but we were looking to the future for a fast reprieve The newspaper clippings show us young strong and clean rockin' slouch hats slung SLRs and greens God help me, I was only nineteen From Vung Tau the black helicopters the chinhook pilots seemed relieved at Nui Dat when they dropped us Feels like months running on and off landing pads letters to Dad 'cause it's like, man, he's sad But he can't see the tents that we call home cans of VB and pin-ups on the lockers of chicks off TV The noise, the mosquitoes and the heat surprising like the first time you see an agent orange horizon So please can you tell me doctor why I still can't get to sleep the scar's left in me? Night time's just a jungle dark and a barking M16 that keeps saying 'rest in peace' And what the hell's this rash that comes and goes I don't suppose you can tell me what that means? God help me, I was only nineteen 77 Experiencing Poetry Sent off on a four-week long operation where every single step could be your last one My two legs were sorta living hell falling with the shells, war within yourself But you wouldn't let your mates down 'til they had you dusted off so you closed your eyes and thought of something else Then someone yelled 'contact!' another bloke swore we hooked in there for hours then a god almighty roar Then Frankie kicked a mine the day that mankind kicked the moon God help me, he was going home in June And I can still see Frank with a can in his hand thirty-six hour leave in the bar at the Grand I can still hear Frank a screaming mess of bleeding flesh couldn't retrieve his legs The ANZAC legend neglected to mention the mud the fear the blood the tears the tension Dad's recollection beyond comprehension didn't seem quite real until we were sent in The chaos and confusion the fire and steel hot shrapnel in my back I didn't even feel God help me, I was only nineteen So please can you tell me doctor why I can't get to sleep I can't hardly eat? 78 Experiencing Poetry And the sound of the Channel Seven chopper still chills me to my feet still fuels my grief? And what's this rash that comes and goes like the dreams can you tell me what that means? God help me, I was only nineteen Mum and Dad and Denny saw the passing out parade at Puckapunyal It was a long march from Cadets The sixth battalion was the next to tour It was me who drew the card we did Canungra and Shoalwater before we left So please can you tell me doctor why I can't get to sleep I can't hardly eat? And the sound of the Channel Seven chopper still chills me to my feet still fuels my grief? And what's this rash that comes and goes like the dreams can you tell me what that means? God help me, I was only nineteen. . (John Schumann, as performed by Hip Hop band ‘The Herd’). Lyrics www.allthelyrics.com/lyrics/the_herd/ 79 Experiencing Poetry Weapons Training. And when I say eyes right I want to hear those eyeballs click and the gentle pitter-patter of falling dandruff you there what's the matter why are you looking at me are you a queer? look to your front if you had one more brain it'd be lonely what are you laughing at you in the back row with the unsightly fat between your elephant ears open that drain you call a mind and listen remember first the cockpit drill when you go down be sure the old crown-jewels are safely tucked away what could be more distressing than to hold off with a burst from your trusty weapon a mob of the little yellows only to find back home because of your position your chances of turning the key in the ignition considerably reduced? allright now suppose for the sake of argument you've got a number-one blockage and a brand-new pack of Charlies are coming at you you can smell their rotten fish-sauce breath hot on the back of your stupid neck allright now what are you going to do about it? that's right grab and check the magazine man it's not a woman's tit worse luck or you'd be set too late you nit they're on you and your tripes are round your neck you've copped the bloody lot just like I said and you know what you are? You're dead, dead, dead Bruce Dawe 1930 - 80 Experiencing Poetry Activity Four appendices. The Beastie Boys – In a World Gone Mad. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D3szSKD3meg [CHORUS] In a world gone mad it's hard to think right So much violence hate and spite Murder going on all day and night Due time we fight the non-violent fight Mirrors, smokescreens and lies It's not the politicians but their actions I despise You and Saddam should kick it like back in the day With the cocaine and Courvoisier But you build more bombs as you get more bold As your mid-life crisis war unfolds All you want to do is take control Now put that axis of evil bullshit on hold Citizen rule number 2080 Politicians are shady So people watch your back 'cause I think they smoke crack I don't doubt it look at how they act [CHORUS] In a world gone mad it's hard to think right So much violence hate and spite Murder going on all day and night Due time we fight the non-violent fight First the 'War On Terror' now war on Iraq We're reaching a point where we can't turn back Let's lose the guns and let's lose the bombs And stop the corporate contributions that their built upon Well I'll be sleeping on your speeches 'til I start to snore 'Cause I won't carry guns for an oil war As-Salamu alaikum, wa alaikum assalam Peace to the Middle East peace to Islam Now don't get us wrong 'cause we love America But that's no reason to get hysterica They're layin' on the syrup thick We ain't waffles we ain't havin' it 81 Experiencing Poetry [CHORUS] In a world gone mad it's hard to think right So much violence hate and spite Murder going on all day and night Due time we fight the non-violent fight Now how many people must get killed? For oil families pockets to get filled? How many oil families get killed? Not a damn one so what's the deal? It's time to lead the way and de-escalate Lose the weapons of mass destruction and the hate Say ooh ah what's the White House doin'? Oh no! Say, what they got brewing?! Well I'm not pro Bush and I'm not pro Saddam We need these fools to remain calm George Bush you're looking like Zoo Lander Trying to play tough for the camera What am I on crazy pills? We've got to stop it Get your hand out my grandma's pocket We need health care more than going to war You think it's democracy they're fighting for? [CHORUS] In a world gone mad it's hard to think right So much violence hate and spite Murder going on all day and night Due time we fight the non-violent fight Post Cards from Hajj Omran Macedonians on the lost trail, Russian cavalry dragging mules, Shepherds of sly goats on the march, carrying guns and fresh cheese, Did Abdel Salam Barazani flare it up Like one strikes a match? Rawandouz leaves but a sigh, like walnut stains on the palms of your hand, Which trees questioned for the Naqashbandites the pole star? Came:Macedonians, Alexander the grate's ideal stature, Russians, Kurdish rebels, the British, Social classes from all over the world, 82 Experiencing Poetry the Shah, artillerymen and rocket experts, a general from overseas, came: a woman looking for her sons... (in this lost corner of the world ships turned in to stone, and the " Nationalist council for Hatred" reigns over an orchard Of stone and gun-powder. Flares beyond the river. Roses from Bukhara. Rosary beads from Qom. An Armenian face. Quiet are the waves of van. Into the silence, the bell tints. Syria's, Yazidis. Turkmen violence. Assyrian peasants. Delicious is the village wine- The partisans are in the cave and BobDinar in the Mirage 2000) Country born between river and river Country torn between sword and sword You barely drew a map of light, that were dimmed the lights on Summer's minaret and al Raha walls... Which white-dark Hellenic woman built a winepress and a pottery? built cities from Hajj Omran to the sea? (when Alexander the Great, died there were, in Mesopotamia alone, three hundred towns and cities bearing his name) Country born between river and river Country tom between sword and sword, Bitter country with imbecile rulers The children of Nisibis grazed your fresh grass. And the chaldean rose slept in her forgotten mass ... Do woman still carry it in their wombs? Hark, rose by river and sea watered: Once, we meant to make History. but, stood waiting ... so the mom passed, and History passed Byzantines passed and Daylams. Constantinople or Mecca. Al-Hallaj and Al-Hajaj. Who will ever awaken the rose of Memory in these salty marches? Would we still drink from I shtar's jar wine that once flowed from the eyes of Gilgamesh's? Ah! Country born between river and river Country torn between sword and sword, Whenever you conjure your ancestors, beat the Barbarian drums... Nationalists enjoying the affluence of torture, devouring the tens of thousands they have killed (the communists were blind-folded, stacked like corpses, yet hymns rose in crescendo as the execution squads woke UP in the ailing dawn) Blood in Babylonia, what is the difference between the squads of years and the squads of death? would that my arm be a tree-root, I'd unleash my Winged Bulls, and with the magic of my Gods and children, stop the invaders at Uruk's gates... But, Country born between river and river Country torn 83 Experiencing Poetry between sword and sword, Country between Hajj Omran and Basrah, between Revolution and Death, the time-bomb was mightier than you, mightier than your contented water clocks. And you surrendered to the Primitive Bedouins who came from the peripheries, from those villages thrown in capital letters on the military maps of this cruel world. The Metropoles across Marum Bizantum had synchronised their time. And the Barbarian hordes swarmed upon you from their savage villages; you, fair maiden of the Summerian jars; you, beautiful arabesque on the ceramics murals. You water and words... The Metropoles had synchronised their time, and the Barbarians came upon you exhausted and bleeding, O, country born between river and river country torn between sword and sword, Why the sailorsbar. Mossul horsemen. Dyana. Assyrian ruins. The kings of the Hatra. Syria's. Shqlawa. Bab al-Shikh. Bikhal waterfalls. The last sky. AlZaqqura. The papyrus in the Ahwar marshes. Fahd. The Leninists. The pilot in the MIG fighter. The people of Kufah. The exile in Nuqrat alSalman. Asoldier in the cafe at Samarrah. Dockers on the waterfront Why have they all become prisoners in a jungle of wild beasts? what are Uruk's children up to? What is the priest praying for? What says the oracle? and the prisoners of war who surrendered to God by the thousands? And the dead? Country torn between sword and sword? The rocks of Kurdistan have acquired the mechanism for destroying bunkers. Vietnam's victory was no geographic exclusivity. In Suar Tokeh, the chars carrying mortar guns were weeping like mules. Asks a recruit: why don't the sergeants rebel? Yesterday, a platoon surrendered at night fall. Silence, soldiers! silence, palm trees torn between Khorramshahr and Ahwaz! My voice, an aunt who lost her sons, a child shuddering On the roads of exile. Kurdistan retracts into her crevasses. and Dyana asks about Dyana.... Country born between river and river Country torn between sword and sword, Baghdad buys her gloves from a Parisian fashion shop. Is Jacques Chirac the famous Monsieur 10% And that socialist who anoints with mpagne the Exocet rocket? Which genuine Arab in Pouters were the Righteous Ancestors? Which un-Arab Arabs in these villages of oblivion were the socialists? (May I suggest to Mr.Francois Mitterand, President of the French Republic, to carefully read the "Collected Works" of Hajj Khayyrallaa Tulfah, official theoretician of the Baghdad regime; Regis Derby's help will be appreciated!) Country born between river and river country born between sword and sword, This land which had been our home, even for one day, has it beacon the invaders passageway? or just another prey? Did You have to elect the sick Prince even at the fateful price? 84 Experiencing Poetry Peace be upon you, my land peace be upon you. Mandali Ba'qouba Baghdad... trinity Of the world-Hellerltic Organization. And Alexander-the-student/ drunk from Aristotle's cup,was sweeping across lands with horsemen and wine, building cities to be later destroyed by Priests/ officers and bedouins, and Mandali was the road... Xellophones "Anabasis": Mandali was the road. Budyeni’s cavalry: and Mandali was the road... Persians and Turks. Turks and Turks. Mamluks and Buwayhi soldiers. Arabs for thus and for that. Sunnis. Sabeans. Shiis descendants of the Prophet's household. Ayyarun. Chaldeans. Nestorians. Atheists. Sun worshippers. And Kharijites.... One day, Alexander, drunk from Aristotle's cup, came to us from mandali and Budyeni's cavalry and Xenophone's " Anabasis". Hulago came too.... Mandali Ba'qouba Baghdad... Officers at the Headquarters Russian rnade helicopter is Might object. For the Russian made helicopter is Overflying Hajj Omrane, Becht Ashsn, And this War is unlike wars Of old. For war, here, is forgotten. Forgotten, the dead Forgotten, the year,. For who remernbers the dead? and who remembers the Years? (Barely mentioned by sorne bulletins Published Overseas ) Officers at the I feadquarters: we are fighting in a country that was never ours. Birmam or Tikrit? Let the jungle of guns burn! burl, the water Course Tikrit remains and Baghdad is the journey's end! Mandali Ba'qouba Baghdad.. The farce begins, and assassinated Baghdad is now dead. Swiss guards for the intelligent Mary-Antoinette watching over the Muslims' Treasury French guards for Mecca and Medina U.S. guards for those who inherited control to surrender Israeli guards for Beirut which refuses to surrender Guards on my house Guards on my voice Guards on my Gulf Guards on Crowned heads from Abha to Ifran Guards on the sands Of the Arabia, penninsula Guards nn the channels Guards on all the airport that link island to island s, far and near Guards On the new's paperink Guards on my prison 85 Experiencing Poetry Guards on flowers Guards on the tipsiness Of wine Guards on the branches Of the trees Guards on my homeland Heavenly guards on God's children front the East bank of the Euphrates to the Valley of the Nile. What else remains? May be in Hajj Omran Will we ask Ourselves about that cup we chose to drink, and prepared for it banquets dripped with our people's blood. How naive, were the leftists! how faint the singer's voice! High grows the papyrus ... but the machine-gun is stacked away, rocks abound, yet no rifles are at sight. It is us who delivered our beards ( Assyria's pride to the one who doesn't even know how to pluck them, taught him to be an executioner and told our friends the sordid lie). And here we are now, awaiting the end of this orgiastic folly Perhaps in Hajj Omran will we realize that this cup remains. Waiters might quarrel; a waiter will go, another will come, yet another, but the cup remains unchanged. who knows? Perhaps a new renaissance will deliver us from the burning quest. Who knows? perhaps a new balance of forces (without our participation) will stop the catastrophe... And, what about us? Inflamed by the fire of ancestors,, prepared to receive the rose of the soul, uncovered discoverers, wanderers, squanderers... But, mightier, is the Earth, heavier the impact of the falling comet, and all our modern ammunition is not worth one bullet from our old gun. Let us, then, rise in soul beyond our bloody Present and recognise, for once, our bitter predicament and let the journey start from the darkness of this very night! Saady Yossuf 1934 - Notes :• • • • • • • • • • • Hajj Omran: is a region in I raq’s Kurdistan occupied by Iranian forces in 1983. Fahd(Yussuf Salman Yussuf) 1900-1948 is founder and leader of the Iraqi Commu nist Party. Uruk, Nisibis, hatra, al-Raha: historic localities of Iraq. Xenophone’s "Anabasis": recounts the author" adventures while a soldier of fortune in Presses and Kurdistan. Budyeni: officer of cavalry in Tsarist Russia later to rally the October Revolu tion and become legendary leader of the Red Cavalry. Led the Russian cavallry in Iraq during WW 1. Al-Hajaj : bloody ruler of Iraq in 8th century. Al-Hallaj: sufi martyr. Ba’quba, Mandali, Shaqlawa, Kufah, Samarrah and Tikrit: Iraqi cities Bab al-Shaikh : Quarter in Baghdad Khorramshahr, al-Ahwaz, bechtashan, Mahran : Iranian citeis were involved heavily in IranIraq war. Naqrat al-Salman: famous prison in the Iraqi desert 86 Experiencing Poetry Activity Five appendices. U2 Sunday Bloody Sunday Lyrics http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EM4vblG6BVQ&ob=av2n I can't believe the news today Oh, I can't close my eyes And make it go away How long... How long must we sing this song How long, how long... 'cause tonight...we can be as one Tonight... Broken bottles under children's feet Bodies strewn across the dead end street But I won't heed the battle call It puts my back up Puts my back up against the wall Sunday, Bloody Sunday Sunday, Bloody Sunday Sunday, Bloody Sunday And the battle's just begun There's many lost, but tell me who has won The trench is dug within our hearts And mothers, children, brothers, sisters Torn apart Sunday, Bloody Sunday Sunday, Bloody Sunday How long... How long must we sing this song How long, how long... 'cause tonight...we can be as one Tonight...tonight... Sunday, Bloody Sunday Sunday, Bloody Sunday Wipe the tears from your eyes Wipe your tears away Oh, wipe your tears away 87 Experiencing Poetry Oh, wipe your tears away (Sunday, Bloody Sunday) Oh, wipe your blood shot eyes (Sunday, Bloody Sunday) Sunday, Bloody Sunday (Sunday, Bloody Sunday) Sunday, Bloody Sunday (Sunday, Bloody Sunday) And it's true we are immune When fact is fiction and TV reality And today the millions cry We eat and drink while tomorrow they die (Sunday, Bloody Sunday) The real battle just begun To claim the victory Jesus won On... Sunday Bloody Sunday Sunday Bloody Sunday... Two Lorries It's raining on black coal and warm wet ashes. There are tyre-marks in the yard, Agnew's old lorry Has all its cribs down and Agnew the coalman With his Belfast accent's sweet-talking my mother. Would she ever go to a film in Magherafelt? But it's raining and he still has half the load To deliver farther on. This time the lode Our coal came from was silk-black, so the ashes Will be the silkiest white. The Magherafelt (Via Toomebridge) bus goes by. The half-stripped lorry With its emptied, folded coal-bags moves my mother: The tasty ways of a leather-aproned coalman! And films no less! The conceit of a coalman... She goes back in and gets out the black lead And emery paper, this nineteen-forties mother, All business round her stove, half-wiping ashes With a backhand from her cheek as the bolted lorry Gets revved and turned and heads for Magherafelt 88 Experiencing Poetry And the last delivery. Oh, Magherafelt! Oh, dream of red plush and a city coalman As time fastforwards and a different lorry Groans into shot, up Broad Street, with a payload That will blow the bus station to dust and ashes... After that happened, I'd a vision of my mother, A revenant on the bench where I would meet her In that cold-floored waiting room in Magherafelt, Her shopping bags full up with shovelled ashes. Death walked out past her like a dust-faced coalman Refolding body-bags, plying his load Empty upon empty, in a flurry Of motes and engine-revs, but which lorry Was it now? Young Agnew's or that other, Heavier, deadlier one, set to explode In a time beyond her time in Magherafelt... So tally bags and sweet-talk darkness, coalman, Listen to the rain spit in new ashes As you heft a load of dust that was Magherafelt, Then reappear from your lorry as my mother's Dreamboat coalman filmed in silk-white ashes. Seamus Heaney. INFORMATION 'cribs': hinged sides 'Magherafelt': (pronounced Mackerafelt) a town in Northern Ireland 'lode': vein or seam rich in coal 'black lead': preparation for smartening and polishing the exterior of black iron stoves 'emery paper': sandpaper, glasspaper, used for smoothing rough surfaces 'bolted': the lorry's sides put up and locked into place 'red plush': for many people the red velvety seats in cinemas represented luxury 'payload': profit-making cargo; the term is also used of the warhead of a rocket 'revenant': ghost, person returning from the dead 'motes': dust 'tally bags': coal sacks marked so they can be counted and checked off 'heft': lift 'dreamboat': 1940s word for a highly attractive member of the opposite sex 'filmed': covered with a film of ashes (but the idea of a cinema film - black and white in the 1940s - is also present) 89 Experiencing Poetry Excerpt of Martin Luther King’s “I Have A Dream Speech”. Let us not wallow in the valley of despair, I say to you today, my friends. And so even though we face the difficulties of today and tomorrow, I still have a dream. It is a dream deeply rooted in the American dream. I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal." I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia, the sons of former slaves and the sons of former slave owners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood. I have a dream that one day even the state of Mississippi, a state sweltering with the heat of injustice, sweltering with the heat of oppression, will be transformed into an oasis of freedom and justice. I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character. I have a dream today! I have a dream that one day, down in Alabama, with its vicious racists, with its governor having his lips dripping with the words of "interposition" and "nullification" -- one day right there in Alabama little black boys and black girls will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls as sisters and brothers. I have a dream today! I have a dream that one day every valley shall be exalted, and every hill and mountain shall be made low, the rough places will be made plain, and the crooked places will be made straight; "and the glory of the Lord shall be revealed and all flesh shall see it together."2 This is our hope, and this is the faith that I go back to the South with. With this faith, we will be able to hew out of the mountain of despair a stone of hope. With this faith, we will be able to transform the jangling discords of our nation into a beautiful symphony of brotherhood. With this faith, we will be able to work together, to pray together, to struggle together, to go to jail together, to stand up for freedom together, knowing that we will be free one day. 90 Experiencing Poetry Section Four Belonging & Dislocation Rationale This section presents a series of activities that: • • build students’ experience and confidence in reading, listening to and responding to poetry; and explore the theme of belonging and dislocation, encouraging students to empathise with potentially unfamiliar experiences and to reflect on their own. The section identifies a number of mainly contemporary poems, songs and multimedia texts that can be used for the examples, but, as described in the unit rationale, teachers and students are encourages to find works that will fit with the theme, and often it is the act of searching for them with a specific focus in mind that is most revealing. Aims Using the theme as an entry point, this section seeks to continue to build up students’ confidence in approaching and responding to poems to a point where they are comfortable writing and sharing their own poetry in a grand finale poetry slam. The activities build on knowledge of poetic devices and metalanguage from earlier sections, however the section does not focus on these primarily other than the extent to which they equip students to respond effectively to poems. The theme of belonging and dislocation is familiar to many students, who will have experienced them both to some degree. This provides a perfect opportunity to use poetry as a means of expressing emotions and feelings that may not otherwise find voice. Introduction Part one of this section introduces the theme and encourages students to tap into their latent knowledge. The section goes to to explore belonging and dislocation in its most apparent, physical sense, through texts in which a man is in prison and a family constantly on the move. The migrant experience is touched on next, followed by the indigenous sense of belonging and, primarily, dislocation, I their own land. Finally, the students are asked to reflect on what it means to them to be “Australian”, and how this is tied to their own sense of belonging. 91 Experiencing Poetry Texts Kelly, Paul (2010). How to Make Gravy. Camberwell: Penguin Group Kinsella, John (ed.)(2009). The Penguin Anthology of Australian Poetry. Camberwell: Penguin Group Tan, Shaun (2006). The Arrival. South Melbourne: Lothian Books Tranter, John & Mead, Philip (eds.)(1991). The Penguin Book of Modern Australian Poetry. Ringwood: Penguin Books Pung, Alice (ed.)(2008). Growing up Asian in Australia. Melbourne: Back Inc 92 Experiencing Poetry 4/Part One: Who Belongs? As an introduction to the section on belonging and dislocation, the activities in part one aim to develop an understanding of the theme of “belonging and dislocation”, and to present a small number of poetic texts in a range of styles. Part one also attempts to get students thinking about the possibilities that the precise use of language can offer and the meanings that can be conveyed through the poetic form. The familiarity with the poetic form sparked in these lessons will provide the foundation on which future classes will be built. Two poems by a Melbourne-based poet of Chinese background have been chosen for the purposes of this part of the unit, however there are a vast number of other poems that could work just as well. Similarly, popular music offers plenty of fodder on the topic of dislocation especially, however the track chosen is especially suitable because its lyrics suggest a number of deeper political and social issues, however its true meaning is somewhat amorphous. Hence, in this first class, there is no question of a student’s response being “wrong”. Note: Please keep in mind that the texts chosen include some profane language and confronting themes. Resources needed: Audio equipment, recording of M.I.A.’s “Paper Planes”, recording of The Clash “Straight to Hell”. Texts: Ken Chau, “The Early Settlers” and “The Terrorists” in Pung (2008). Lyrics to “Paper Planes”, by M.I.A. are accessible on various websites, also see appendices. Other suggested texts: Some of the well known poems of T.S.Eliot, “The Wasteland” or “Lovesong of J Alfred Prufrock” would work well as an extension for this part. Activities 1. Introductory questions and discussion In pairs or small groups, ask the students to answer a selection of the following questions: • • • • • What forms our identities? Family? Friends? Environment? Clothes? How do we assess and view our own identity? How do others see us? Does your identity change as you grow older? What ‘face’ do we show the world? 93 Experiencing Poetry • • • • • • • • What parts of our identity do we choose? What parts of our identity are acquired some other way? How do other people’s perspectives on you alter your own perspective on yourself? How does age affect our sense of belonging? What is needed to belong to a group? How much of your identity alters when you are part of a group? How do our impressions of others and of environments change after longer acquaintance? Why do humans have a need to belong? What makes you feel you belong? You may choose to offer all of the questions to the students to answer or have them answer a few and use the others as guides for a teacher-led classroom discussion about the nature of belonging. There may be some questions that you want every group to answer. Once you feel that the students have engaged with the concept of belonging in the class discussion, delve deeper and ask them to describe the manner in which individuals might become dislocated from those around them and how that can manifest itself. You may wish to prompt them with ideas of migration, travel, age, culture etc. 2. Popular expressions of dislocation and belonging Ask the students if they can name any texts – writing, music, film, television – that deal with the theme of belonging and dislocation. Write them down on the board and/or ask students to note them down to provide a prompt for their homework. As a class, listen to MIA track “Paper Planes”. The first thing that the students will probably note is the catchy tune, the gunshots and the cash register sounds, and possibly the angelic voices of the choir. Encourage these initial reactions and write them on the board, before playing the track a second time, encouraging students to focus their listening on the lyrics of the song and deciphering what it might be “about”. Once again, write up the student’s suggestions. By this stage you will be developing a picture of what the class feels the song is all about. 3. Focussed discussion Divide the class into an even number of groups provide each group with the lyrics to “Paper Planes” (ref appendix) and one of the two following statements • “Paper Planes” glorifies violence and drug taking. • “Paper Places” draws attention to people’s perception of immigrants. Ask the groups to come up with examples from the lyrics and music to support each of the posited positions The aim of the ensuing class discussion should be to highlight the interpretative clues that are available in a text and encourage students to use them to support their own responses. 94 Experiencing Poetry Two elements that you may wish to highlight when leading a discussion are: • • the contrasts evoked by the somewhat disturbing lyrics, gunshots and language opposed to the catchy sing-along tune and the angelic voices of the choir; and the sampling of the Clash song "Straight To Hell" which “was one of The Clash's slowest, darkest, and most moving songs, a sad meditation on the poor treatment the band felt was being meted out to Third World immigrants in Great Britain and the USA.”1 4. Teacher reading and discussion – Ken Chau “Terrorist” – an evocative word that is prominent in much news reporting in the 20th century and has taken centre stage in the global consciousness in recent history. It is also an ambiguous word, born out in the cliché “One person’s terrorist is another’s freedom fighter.” Two poems by Ken Chau explore this ambiguity in a frank and disarming way. Working as a couplet, they refer to different points in time, “The Early Settlers” providing evidence of the author’s standing as an “Australian” that is being questioned in “The Terrorists”. Read aloud “The Early Settlers” to your class, followed by “The Terrorists”. Ask groups or pairs to take on the persona of the Great Grandfather and the author, and examine the extent to which each might feel dislocated: how, from whom and why. Before the next lesson… Ask the students to find some texts that explore the notion of dislocation. They should be prepared to present their text to the class, whether that be reading a poem aloud to the class, describing a film, a book or a song. 1 http://www.shmoop.com/mia-paper-planes/meaning.html. This article has some interesting discussion about the possible meaning of “Paper Planes” that might provide you with some ideas about where to lead class discussion. 95 Experiencing Poetry 4/Part Two: Dislocation – “Make a wish Tom” The immediate response to a poem, either listened or read, can often reveal the most perceptive insights, however drawing out those initial responses before they become clogged with the requirement to write clearly, use appropriate metalanguage or refer to technicalities such as rhyming schema or metaphors is sometimes difficult. The activity introduced here assists students to “get down” those initial impulses and use them to generate a written response that can then be used as a foundation for a piece of writing that can rely on appropriate metalanguage for clarity of expression. It works well in a classroom setting, and can be especially helpful for students who doubt the value of their own thoughts and refer instead to formulaic responses or those they have read in critical texts. Resources needed: Board for noting responses Texts: Bruce Dawe, “The Drifters” Paul Kelly, “How to Make Gravy” Activities 1. The Brainstorm Ask students to take everything off their desks except for a single piece of paper and a pen. Then ask the students to sit at their desks with their eye closed and simply listen to the poem you are to read. Build suspense by waiting until there is absolute silence, and read theatrically, as appropriate for the poem itself. Once you have competed your reading, tell the students to open their eyes and spend five minutes simply writing down their initial reactions. Let them write for a minute and if you sense some flagging call out some prompts to assist: “What did the poem remind you of?” “Who were the characters that stood out?” “How did the poem make you feel?” “What were some of the images that struck you?” “Write some of the words that stood out.” “Was there any rhyme or interesting sounds?” “Do the themes of belonging and dislocation figure?” (Leave this until last 4 minutes or so in to the exercise.) Give the students five minutes only. 2. Building on the brainstorm Now give the students a copy of the poem each, and read the poem aloud again, or have a student do so. Now, with the poem in front of them, ask the students to write the introduction to an essay- 96 Experiencing Poetry length response to the poem, based on, or at least incorporating, their own initial thoughts that were recorded recorded. Ask students to hand the responses in to you after 15 or 20 minutes. 3. Select students to present to the class After an intense session of listening and writing, students’ presentations are a good way to mix up the class and relax the tone. Select students to present the text that they prepared for homework. You may like to break up this activity over a number of classes if you have a large class. 4. Reading Read aloud the lyrics to Paul Kelly’s How to Make Gravy, one line at a time. Pause at the end of each, and ask students to guess where the narrator is. They may get it at the first few lines, however it may take them until towards the end of the song before they twig that he’s in goal. As a basis for a discussion, ask the students why they think Kelly did not simply make it obvious in the first line that the narrator is in gaol. Use this as a prompt to delve into the mood of the poem and how this is conveyed. Play the song as an end to the discussion and see if the tune and voice is as the students’ expected. Before the next lesson… Ask the students to reflect on the migration experience of someone in their families. 97 Experiencing Poetry 4/Part Three: Migration and the power of the word This part focuses on the migrant experience, a theme very relevant to all Australians, from a recent migrant background or otherwise. Depending on the demographics of your school and class, you might wish to present some background about Australia’s history as a migrant nation and develop a discussion about the migrant experience. The objective of part three is to attune students to the importance that individual words play in poetry, and how the precise choice and placement of words can elevate a text and its insights beyond what can be taken at face value. Ironically the approach to dealing with the importance of words is to remove words, firstly in a cloze reading of Margaret Atwood, and then in showing some examples of films using the same, basic script to demonstrate how the “padding” around words can influence their meaning. The final activity requires students to write their own piece of poetry. Resources needed: Screen that can play YouTube videos; PowerPoint or similar that can display the Atwood poem with selected words deleted. Texts: Margaret Atwood, “The Immigrants” Shaun Tan, The Arrival Other suggested texts: WH Auden “Refugee Blues”, Antigone Kefala “Sunday Visit” Activities 1. Cloze reading2 A cloze reading provides a chance to challenge students’ understandings of a poem or a poetic form by strategically deleting words from a poem and having students guess the words. Begin the class by explaining the notion of the cues we use in reading, linking this with and explaining cloze procedure, distinguishing between regular random deletions and strategic deletions. Also explain the notion of constraints – because of the way our language works there is only a limited set of possible answers, and the students must determine what the most appropriate word is taking into account imagistic, tonal and formal qualities of the poems; the rhyme scheme; the metre of given lines etc. In her excellent narrative of a cloze activity using a Gwen Harwood poem, Meredith Maher3 offers a number of clues that can be put on the board and discussed prior to the activity. 2 3 Inspiration for this activity was drawn from: http://www.stella.org.au/pdf/33_maher.pdf ibid. 98 Experiencing Poetry Semantic cues: • • • • Does it make sense? Does it sustain the meaning already established? Is it consistent with the vocabulary, tone, mood or feeling of the poem (or this segment of the poem)? Syntactic cues: • • • • • • Does it sound like language? Does it fit with the rhythm of the verse? How many syllables are needed? What stress or accentuation is needed? Is it the right part of speech, right tense? (e.g. Is a proper name or a pronoun needed here? Singular or plural? Past, present, future – or some other tense?) Where does it fall in the sentence? What possibilities are there for this place in the syntax? Grapho-phonic cues: • • How does it fit with the rhyming pattern (What is the rhyme scheme)? Are there any limitations on whether this word begins with a vowel or consonant? A copy of Margaret Atwood’s poem “The Immigrants” is included in the appendices with suggested deletions highlighted. This activity works best if you display the poem on the board, read the poem aloud and then ask the students to work on groups to discuss possible words and their rationale for suggesting them. 2. Around the words Make this simple statement to your class: “Not only is the choice of words crucial in poetry – so is the way words are used.” Then show them a number of short films from the following website: http://www.youtube.com/philipscinema Ensure that you include the first-prize winning film, as the emotional gravity that it manages to convey within the strict limits set by the competition is outstanding. As an extension to this activity, you might like to introduce some concrete poems to your students, a form which truly emphasises the role of techniques outside the words themselves. 3. Writing poetry Often, however, it is what is not said that is as important as what is said. Ask your students to “read” Shaun Tan’s graphic novel The Arrival. Then ask them to take one single frame from the book that resonates most strongly with them, and that will form the basis of a poem. The amount of scaffold that you provide your students here will vary widely within and between classes. For confident students you may be able to simply let them get on with writing a poem. For most, however, it will be worth encouraging them to scribble down ideas as a “brainstorm” and build a poem from there as a series of drafts. 99 Experiencing Poetry 4/Part Four: A handful of sand The first activity of part four is based on ideas explored by John V Knapp4 that are borrowed from science teaching techniques. Essentially, the Hypothesis-Experiment-Instruction (HEI) method encourages individual students within a small group to take a position on the meaning of a poem and argue for it using their developing knowledge of how poetry works. Ideally these discussions will, if not lead to a consensus, spark an interesting and intellectually stimulating debate. The teacher’s role is simply to provide an open intellectual environment in which students feel confident to posit a point of view and put forward an argument supporting it. Resources needed: Texts: Kev Carmody, “Elly” Mudrooroo, “Blotched Country Boy” Other suggested texts: The two anthologies cited in this section offer a selection of indigenous poets’ work as well as a number of poems that explore issues of indigenous Australians. The songs of Archie Roach and Ruby Hunter would be ideal also. Activities 1. Introduction to the HEI approach Provide the students with a copy of the lyrics to “Elly” by Kev Carmody, and write the following on the board: “Elly” is about: • • • gambling the price of fame losing your identity Ask your students to choose one of the hypotheses and give them five minutes to write a few notes about why they chose that one. Use these as the basis of a discussion, probing and questioning the evidence that is provided but taking care never to give the impression that any of the hypotheses is incorrect. After a substantial discussion, ask the students to choose again – they can choose a different hypothesis, the same one or posit a different one altogether. On this occasion, rather than asking them to back up their choice, ask them what prompted them to make their second decision – a 4 Knapp, John V. (2002).”Teaching Poetry via HEI (Hypothesis-Experiment-Instruction)” in Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy, 45 pp. 718-729 100 Experiencing Poetry particularly effective argument from a student, perhaps, or a new idea that was stimulated through discussion. 2. HEI approach to Mudrooroo Follow a similar approach to activity one, however this time ask the students to work in small groups using the handout in the appendices. Before the next lesson… Ask your students to have a think about what it means to them to be an Australian and note down some ideas. 101 Experiencing Poetry 4/Part Five: Poetry Slam – Being Australian By this stage, your students should be familiar with listening to poems and responding to them on an emotional and intellectual level, and being able to communicate responses both verbally and in writing. They will also be coming to terms with a variety of lexical and poetic techniques that are used and the effect that they have, and will hopefully be able to recognise that words are malleable and how powerful they can be in the hands of a skilful poet. Depending on your focus through the preceding sections, your students may also have gained plenty of confidence in writing poetry, and in this unit you and your students are going to put your developing skills out there in “Poetry Slam – Australia”, tying up the theme of belonging and dislocation through personalising it. Resources needed: screen with capacity to show You Tube clips. Texts: A.D.Hope, “Australia” Dorothea Mackellar, “My Country” Activities 1. Perceptions of Australia Have students work in groups first reading and then discussing one of the two poems focused on Australia. Ask them to pay particular attention to: a. What feeling the narrator is displaying towards Australia; and b. What aspects of the poem lead them to that conclusion. (eg. word choice, metre, rhyming patterns, other language techniques such as alliteration, metaphors and similes etc.) 2. Writing a poem for a slam First show the students some examples of slam poetry – there’s plenty to be found on the web – and brainstorm the main characteristics of the poetry they have watched and those that they found particularly successful and those that were less so. Also discuss the techniques of the poets doing the reading. All your students should write a poem for the poetry slam. It is important that you as the teacher are seen to be participating, so you should write one too. Take care to respond positively to the students’ work, and reinforce the importance of the drafting process – no poet gets it just right on his or her first attempt. Separating students into small groups to work on editing can be effective, and can also alleviate some of the concerns students have about performing their work to the class if they have already had some positive feedback from their peers. 102 Experiencing Poetry For students that are having difficulty, ask them to brainstorm words and phrases that come to mind when they think about “my place in Australia” and write them on a piece of card. Then ask them to cut them up into single words or phrases, and arrange them in groups that have something in common. This can be used as a framework for a poem, to which can be added linking words and phrases, and other images that fit in with the theme. 3. Poetry Slam How you organise the poetry slam itself is, of course, up to you. Fundamentally a poetry slam involves poets performing their work (usually with a three minute limit) and the audience voting on the best performance. Here are some things that you may wish to consider before you begin: • • • • • While all students must write a poem, they should not be forced to read them or compete. Hopefully, as the slam continues, more Teams’ competition – a friendly competition between, say, two classes, may add to the atmosphere of the event. Extra spice can be added if the teachers of said classes start the ball rolling. Having students read poems in pairs, one from each team, the audience votes on the better performance (secret ballot, loudest cheer?). The team with the most votes wins. Reading in pairs or small groups should be considered. Simple props can add to a performance. Music should not be allowed. 103 Experiencing Poetry Assessment The assessment of this section of the unit has been left deliberately vague, even in comparison to other units. While feedback on students’ work is obviously encouraged, a structured marking regime has the effect of restricting the freedom of both the student and the teacher to take risks and experiment – both crucial in a developed response to poetry and its writing. The section does, however, offer opportunities to assess students’ work as it stands, and more similar exercises can be built in if required: • • • • In-class written introduction in response to “The Drifters” Set a homework essay of responding to a number of poems with similar themes (by the same or different author) Student poetry Student performance of poems 104 Experiencing Poetry Section Four Appendices Part 1 Activity 1 PAPER PLANES M.I.A I fly like paper, get high like planes If you catch me at the border I got visas in my name If you come around here, I make 'em all day I get one down in a second if you wait I fly like paper, get high like planes If you catch me at the border I got visas in my name If you come around here, I make 'em all day I get one down in a second if you wait Sometimes I feel sitting on trains Every stop I get to I'm clocking that game Everyone's a winner now we're making that fame Bonafide hustler making my name Sometimes I feel sitting on trains Every stop I get to I'm clocking that game Everyone's a winner now we're making that fame Bonafide hustler making my name All I wanna do is (BANG BANG BANG BANG!) And (KKKAAAA CHING!) And take your money All I wanna do is (BANG BANG BANG BANG!) And (KKKAAAA CHING!) And take your money All I wanna do is (BANG BANG BANG BANG!) And (KKKAAAA CHING!) And take your money Pirate skulls and bones Sticks and stones and weed and bombs Running when we hit 'em Lethal poison through their system Pirate skulls and bones Sticks and stones and weed and bombs 105 Experiencing Poetry Running when we hit 'em Lethal poison through their system No one on the corner has swag like us Hit me on my banner prepaid wireless We pack and deliver like UPS trucks A radio in hell just pumping that gas No one on the corner has swag like us Hit me on my banner prepaid wireless We pack and deliver like UPS trucks A radio in hell just pumping that gas All I wanna do is (BANG BANG BANG BANG!) And (KKKAAAA CHING!) And take your money All I wanna do is (BANG BANG BANG BANG!) And (KKKAAAA CHING!) And take your money All I wanna do is (BANG BANG BANG BANG!) And (KKKAAAA CHING!) And take your money M.I.A. Third world democracy Yeah, I got more records than the K.G.B. So, uh, no funny business Some some some I some I murder Some I some I let go Some some some I some I murder Some I some I let go 106 Experiencing Poetry Part 1, Activity 3 THE EARLY SETTLERS Ken Chau THE TERRORISTS Ken Chau Great-Grandfather arrived They are everywhere in 1897 to grow corn cabbage tobacco in Wahgunyah I wear paranoia like armour the early settlers already entrenched like stone each a foreign devil a potential terrorist like a raincoat when it rains when it doesn’t the first terrorist he called a fucking bastard when smothered by their attacks in his own language. I want to die I want to kill the fucking bastards for making me feel that being born in Australia and being an Australian are not the same. 107 Experiencing Poetry Part 2 Activity 2 DRIFTERS Bruce Dawe One day soon he’ll tell her it’s time to start packing, and the kids will yell ‘Truly?’ and get wildly excited for no reason, and the brown kelpie pup will start dashing about, tripping everyone up, and she’ll go out to the vegetable-patch and pick all the green tomatoes from the vines, and notice how the oldest girl is close to tears because she was happy here, and how the youngest girl is beaming because she wasn’t. And the first thing she’ll put on the trailer will be the bottling-set she never unpacked from Grovedale, and when the loaded ute bumps down the drive past the blackberrycanes with their last shrivelled fruit, she won’t even ask why they’re leaving this time, or where they’re heading for -she’ll only remember how, when they came here, she held out her hands bright with berries, the first of the season and said: ‘Make a wish, Tom, make a wish.’ 108 Experiencing Poetry Part 3 Activity 1 THE IMMIGRANTS Margaret Atwood They are allowed to inherit the sidewalks involved as palmlines, bricks exhausted and soft, the deep lawnsmells, orchards whorled to the land’s contours, the inflected weather only to be told they are too poor to keep it up, or someone has noticed and wants to kill them; or the towns pass laws and declare them obsolete. I see them coming up from the hold smelling of vomit, infested, emaciated, their skins grey with travel; as they step on shore the old countries recede, become perfect, thumbnail castles preserved like gallstones in a glass bottle, the towns dwindle upon the hillsides in a light paperweight-clear. They carry their carpetbags and trunks with clothes, dishes, the family pictures; they think they will make an order like the old one, sow miniature orchards, carve children and flocks out of wood but always they are too poor, the sky is flat, the green fruit shrivels in the prairie sun, wood is for burning; and if they go back, the towns in time have crumbled, their tongues stumble among awkward teeth, their ears are filled with the sound of breaking glass. I wish I could forget them and so forget myself: my mind is a wide pink map across which move year after year arrows and dotted lines, further and further, people in railway cars 109 Experiencing Poetry their heads stuck out of the windows at stations, drinking milk or singing, their features hidden with beards or shawls day and night riding across an ocean of unknown land to an unknown land. http://www.poetryarchive.org/poetryarchive/singlePoem.do?poemId=97 110 Experiencing Poetry Part 4 Activity 1 ELLY Kev Carmody Elly wrapped her nineteen years In a coat from ’41 Had the looks that’d make a grown man sigh From the Diamantina River country She crossed the dry mid west From her childhood schemes and sheltered dreams She broke the ties The commercial man made blunt demands As they travelled south by east Elly turned into a woman over night He set her down in the heart of town The millionaires retreat She gazed up at the tall glass and concrete walls At Main St. Surfers Paradise CHORUS If the decks been marked before the deal You learn to compromise Or you get to know the cool hand with the dice You learn to live off losers, for they make the mistakes twice You’re living in high society but you’re street wise Just to survive, just to survive With those centrefold looks And bay-blue eyes Man she stacked them in All the senators and doctors called her Madam With her fifteen girls she built a world A pleasured paradise On what a man of God would call the wages of sin CHORUS A wealthy woman Drinks with diamond rings Twenty stories high Gazes out as the sun lifts from the sea To make it to the top Elly sacrificed the lot And found that seven figure sum was far too high a fee CHORUS http://kevcarmody.com.au/recordings/reviews/lyrics-cannot 111 Experiencing Poetry Part 4 Activity 2 Class handout: Each student in the group must choose one of the hypotheses below. After you have made your choice, you and members of your group are to discuss the poem and explain choices. Having fully discussed why you each made your selection, your group is to revote. Each of you then has the option of choosing another given alternative to your original choice, or you may create a completely new hypothesis. The poem the “Blotched Country Boy”: • is about the effect of drugs on indigenous Australians • is about the narrator’s desire to return to the country • is about the narrator’s life journey • is about the power of the “white man” BLOTCHED COUNTRY BOY Mudrooroo Would you believe that once I breathed The country air of dreaming forth the big city Highway straddled, or I the highway Take your pick or sing a country tune I was a country boy – once, entire Now patched blotches map my face Free from country roads This is the end of the highway Sweating, junkie thoughts skin pops the needle Veined desire hurts worse than country boots Legs meant for striding Stagger to the bossman Remaindering grains of super glue To fasten down my widebrimmed hat In shade my face leans away from the sun To talk of shattered hours through the day Poverty trembles my lost country voice As brain cells urge me to avoid the straights in suits Pontificating in their nice clean city frames I am a bed rented out by the hour I am well sold out to the lowest bidder I mumble a country lie for my feed I stumble my dole cheque to the Master Who sprinkles the powder of forgetfulness Beneath my cowman’s hat in scorn I suck in phantasy like bulldust Watching the vein pop up then implode As cells overdrive into ecstasy And I ride the range the Marlboro man Or skid down the highway whole and entire 112 Experiencing Poetry Part 5 Activity 1 MY COUNTRY Dorothea Mackellar The love of field and coppice, Of green and shaded lanes. Of ordered woods and gardens Is running in your veins, Strong love of grey-blue distance Brown streams and soft dim skies I know but cannot share it, My love is otherwise. I love a sunburnt country, A land of sweeping plains, Of ragged mountain ranges, Of droughts and flooding rains. I love her far horizons, I love her jewel-sea, Her beauty and her terror The wide brown land for me! A stark white ring-barked forest All tragic to the moon, The sapphire-misted mountains, The hot gold hush of noon. Green tangle of the brushes, Where lithe lianas coil, And orchids deck the tree-tops And ferns the warm dark soil. Core of my heart, my country! Her pitiless blue sky, When sick at heart, around us, We see the cattle dieBut then the grey clouds gather, And we can bless again The drumming of an army, The steady, soaking rain. Core of my heart, my country! Land of the Rainbow Gold, For flood and fire and famine, She pays us back threefoldOver the thirsty paddocks, Watch, after many days, The filmy veil of greenness That thickens as we gaze. 113 Experiencing Poetry An opal-hearted country, A wilful, lavish landAll you who have not loved her, You will not understandThough earth holds many splendours, Wherever I may die, I know to what brown country My homing thoughts will fly. http://www.imagesaustralia.com/mycountry.htm AUSTRALIA A.D.Hope A nation of trees, drab green and desolate grey In the field uniform of modern wars Darkens her hills, those endless, outstretched paws Of Sphinx demolished or stone lion worn away. They call her a young country, but they lie: She is the last of lands, the emptiest, A woman beyond her change of life, a breast Still tender but within the womb is dry. Without songs, architecture, history: The emotions and superstitions of younger lands, Her rivers of water drown among inland sands, The river of her immense stupidity Floods her monotonous tribes from Cairns to Perth. In them at last the ultimate men arrive Whose boast is not: 'we live' but 'we survive', A type who will inhabit the dying earth. And her five cities, like five teeming sores, Each drains her: a vast parasite robber-state Where second-hand Europeans pullulate Timidly on the edge of alien shores. Yet there are some like me turn gladly home From the lush jungle of modern thought, to find The Arabian desert of the human mind, Hoping, if still from the deserts the prophets come, Such savage and scarlet as no green hills dare Springs in that waste, some spirit which escapes The learned doubt, the chatter of cultured apes Which is called civilization over there. http://johnwatsonsite.com/MyClassNotes/Topics/Poetry/Australia%20AD%20Hope.html 114