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Warm-up: Day 1 Take a picture from the pile on your way in. Please sit down at your desk, take out a piece of paper, and begin writing. Your task is to describe the scene in front of you in as much detail as you can. Use all five senses. Be ready to share.

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Warm-up: Day 1

Take a picture from the pile on your way in.

Please sit down at your desk, take out a piece of paper, and begin writing.

Your task is to describe the scene in front of you in as much detail as you can. Use all five senses.

Be ready to share.

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Question #1:

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What is Imagery?

It is description. Factual (what is actually there)

i.e.: the gritty wet sand under her bare feet

Figurative (an object is described when compared to another noun) i.e.: the armies of sand grains advancing

across the wood floor of the beach house

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What is Imagery?

It USES ALL 5 SENSES, not only visual cues. Sight Sound Smell Taste Touch

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What is Imagery?

It inspires imagination in readers. Your reader should be able to see, hear,

smell, taste, and touch people, objects and scenes that are not physically present.

“Images are seductive in themselves, but they’re not merely scenery, or shouldn’t be. An image, when it’s doing its full work, can direct a reader toward some insight, bring a poem to an emotional [height], embody an idea.”

– Kim Addonizio

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Question #2:

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Which line contains the image?1. It is best to consider

consequences before proceeding.

2.Look before you leap.

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Which line contains the image?1.Have you hugged your

child today?2. It’s important to reassure

your offspring of your affection.

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Which line contains the image?1.Wag the dog.2.The situation is being

manipulated by peripheral interests.

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Which line contains the image?1. I will do everything in my

power to over turn this unjust verdict.

2. I will fall like an ocean on that court! (Arthur Miller, The Crucible)

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Which line contains the image?1. They are not pigs, they are

not even fish, /Though they have a piggy and a fishy air— (Sylvia Plath, “Stillborn”)

2. The verses I am writing have no vitality; they are unattractive and stale.

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Question #3:

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1. Slow down your writing.

In other words, add more detail.

Make sure each word is included on purpose.

Be certain your reader can imagine what you’re describing.

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2. Avoid clichés.

Fits like a glove Fight for your life Walk on eggshells Jump for joy Eat your words Flesh and blood Not my cup of tea

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3. Avoid…

Abstractions (ideas/concepts that cannot be experienced directly through one of our five senses) Anger, love, hate, criticism, intelligence, greed,

death Generalizations (can only be vaguely

visualized because they include too many of a given group) Creatures, something, kitchen equipment,

everything Judgments (telling the reader instead of

showing them) Suspiciously, beautiful, insidious

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Generalization -> Specific Domestic animal Dog Mixed-breed Shepherd Old Sammy asleep on the red rug,

his haunches twitching in his dream

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Writing Exercise

Take the word and generalization “food” and turn it into something specific, something you’ve said on purpose.

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Identify Abstractions, Generalizations, and Judgments

The streets of a typical French city do not form regular patterns or meet at right angles as they do in the United States. In addition, the street names are frequently based on a landmark, a famous person or a historical event. You'll notice that the city of Metz is typical of most French cities in its street patterns and names. For example, there is a street named Rue de la Fontaine and one named Rue Robert Serot.

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Identify Abstractions, Generalizations, and Judgments

The streets of a typical French city do not form regular patterns or meet at right angles as they do in the United States. In addition, the street names are frequently based on a landmark, a famous person or a historical event. You'll notice that the city of Metz is typical of most French cities in its street patterns and names. For example, there is a street named Rue de la Fontaine and one named Rue Robert Serot.

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Writing Exercise

Using the passage handed to you and your partner, identify the abstractions, generalizations, and judgments made in the passage.

Choose three(3) of these abstractions, generalizations, and judgments.

Invent an image that suggests each word on the list, giving you a total of 3 images.

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4. Show, don’t tell.

Let your writing be: Concrete ( there is an image,

something that can be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched)

Detailed (there is a degree of focus and specificity)

Significant (the specific image also suggests an abstraction, generalization, or judgment)

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Anne Tyler Example

See worksheet.

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5. Try figures of speech

Metaphors A comparison made without using “like”

or “as” Similes

A comparison made using “like” or “as” Personification

Giving human qualities to inanimate objects

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Writing Exercise

Brainstorm a list of household items, rooms, parts of a house. Make a list on the chalkboard.

Now, I’d like each of you to write a poem in which you build your dream house. Example

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“The more you practice with imagery—recording it in as much vivid detail as you can—the more likely it is that your poetry will become an experience for the reader, rather than simply talk about an experience. We are surrounded by images daily. Pay attention to those images, and use them to make your [writing shine].” – Kim Addonizio

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Homework: (See the Ning) Bring in an object that is important to you. Read Annie Dillard’s short piece of creative

nonfiction in which she describes a single observation during a nature walk.

I’ve posted it in the Class Discussion section of the Ning.

Respond to the discussion by commenting on one of the questions I’ve posed and/or by responding to one of your classmates.

Your response should be detailed and specific. Don’t cop out!

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Warm-up: Day 2

Pick any two contrasting images. (Can you find two as strikingly different as guns and flowers?) Develop each image with specific details, arranging the two images in alternating lines or paragraphs.

What effects do you achieve?

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Show and Tell: Step 1

On paper, describe your object: What does it look like? What does it feel like in your hands?

Answer these questions in writing: How long have you had this object? Who gave it to you? Who made it? Where did it come from? If you lose it, can you buy another? Does the object have a special meaning for

you? Please explain.

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Show and Tell: Step 2

Each of us will present our objects to the group and pass them around while we tell our “stories” regarding these objects.

Everyone will take notes on each object in our Writers Notebooks.

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Show and Tell: Step 3

Write a short poem of thanks, an ode, to an object of your choice. It could be the object you brought it, or it could be an item that caught your attention during our sharing session.

See the example on the next slide.

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To My Flute

Thank you for staying with me, for never complaining when I neededyour song.

Thank you, flute, for being strongas the cedar tree from whose wood you were born.

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Thank you for listeningto my sadnessin your hollow stomach.

Thank you for carrying my father’s voice

and the Cheyenne spiritand the wild Oklahoma wind.

- Chad Sweeney