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TPS-FASTT A Method for Poetry Analysis

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TPS-FASTT. A Method for Poetry Analysis. TPS-FASTT. TPS-FASTT is an acronym that stands for: Title Paraphrase Speaker Figurative Language Attitude (Tone) Shift Title Theme - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: TPS-FASTT

TPS-FASTTA Method for Poetry

Analysis

Page 2: TPS-FASTT

TPS-FASTTTPS-FASTT is an acronym that stands for:

• Title• Paraphrase• Speaker• Figurative Language• Attitude (Tone)• Shift• Title• ThemeFollowing this format gives you a clear and

formulaic way to analyze poetry that might otherwise be confusing or difficult

Page 3: TPS-FASTT

TITLE

Examine the title before reading the

poem.

Sometimes the title will give you a clue

about the content of the poem.

In some cases the title will give you

crucial information that will help you

understand a major idea within the poem.

Page 4: TPS-FASTT

PARAPHRASE

Means “to put into your own words.”

Paraphrase the literal action within the poem.

At this point, resist the urge to jump to

interpretation.

A failure to understand what happens on a literal

level leads to a misunderstanding of what is

happening on a figurative level.

Page 5: TPS-FASTT

SPEAKERWho is the speaker in this poem?

Remember to always distinguish speaker (narrator) from the

poet (author). • In some cases the speaker and poet might be the same,

as in an autobiographical or “confessional” poem, but often the speaker and the poet are entirely different.

• More often than not, the poet writes from the point of view of someone or something else.

It is also important to identify who the intended audience is.

 

Page 6: TPS-FASTT

FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE

Examine the poem for language that is not used literally.

This would include-- but is certainly not limited to-- specific

literary devices pertaining to figurative language, such as:• imagery, symbolism, metaphor, simile, personification, hyperbole

Sound devices• alliteration, onomatopoeia, assonance, consonance, rhyme

and any other devices used in a non-literal manner.

You also want to pay attention to the connotative association

surrounding specific stanzas, lines, or words.

 

Page 7: TPS-FASTT

ATTITUDETone, meaning the speaker's ATTITUDE towards the SUBJECT of

the poem.

Of course, this means that you must discern the subject of the

poem. • In some cases it will be narrow, and in others it will be broad.

Also keep in mind the speaker's attitude toward self, other

characters, and the subject, as well as attitudes of characters other

than the speaker.

Identify “tone” words or “charged” words that reveal the speaker’s

attitude.

Page 8: TPS-FASTT

SHIFT

Note shifts (switches) in speaker and attitude.

Shifts can be indicated in a number of ways, including:• the occasion of poem (time and place)• key turn words (but, yet, then, etc.)• punctuation(dashes, periods, colons, etc.)• stanza divisions• changes in line and stanza length• and anything that indicates that something has changed or a

question is being answered.

Page 9: TPS-FASTT

TITLE

Examine the title again, this time on an interpretive level

Page 10: TPS-FASTT

THEME

First list what the poem is about (subject) than determine

what the poet is saying about each of those subjects (theme).

Remember, theme must always be expressed in a complete

sentence or statement. • Example:

• “FREEDOM” is not a theme.• “Fighting for freedom is an honorable and noble act.” This would

be a theme.

Page 11: TPS-FASTT

PUTTING IT INTO PRACTICE

Following the TPS-FASTT format, we will now delve into

some poetry.

In addition to identifying specific literary elements, you

will also write up a TPS-FASTT analysis of the poems.