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How Poetic Metre Works || Form Fundamentals || Return to Form || 2 года назад


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How Poetic Metre Works || Form Fundamentals || Return to Form ||

The final episode of Form Fundamentals is all about poetic metre. How do you identify the stresses in a line? What’s a foot? Why do we use metre, and how can you write in it? Dr. Katie Ailes breaks in all down in this comprehensive video. This episode covers the following skills and terms: identifying stresses and stress patterns; terms for poetic feet (iamb, trochee, dactyl, amphibrach, & anapest); combining feet to create metrical lines; lines for metrical lines; identifying different metres through examples; strategies for bending and breaking metre (including mixed-metre poetry); and guidance on how to write in metre. This is a long one, but well worth it - plus, there are kittens! This video is part of our Return to Form project, celebrating poetic forms and providing resources to poets interested in using them. You can watch all of the videos in the Return to Form project through this playlist:    • Return to Form   … and all of the corresponding workshops (including the other Form Fundamentals videos) here:    • The Workshop   The Return to Form project project was made possible by The National Lottery through Creative Scotland. Learn more about this project through our website: http://iamloud.co/rtf Poems featured in this episode: Callum O’Dwyer, “The Kiss.” Commissioned by I Am Loud for Return to Form Season 1. Watch it (alongside Hannah Lavery’s poem “Barbed Kisses”) here:    • Shakespearean Sonnets - Hannah Lavery...   Song of the Witches from Macbeth IV.i 10-19; 35-38: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem... “A Visit from St. Nicholas” by Clement Clarke Moore: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem... More resources on poetic metre: We didn’t cover spondaic and pyrrhic metre in this episode; these are feet in which both of the syllables have the same stresses. This article is helpful for understanding the spondee: https://www.masterclass.com/articles/... … and this is a handy definition of pyrrhic metre: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/lear... For a detailed and enjoyable explanation of poetic metre (including lines with partial feet), I highly recommend Stephen Fry’s book ‘The Ode Less Travelled.’ It breaks down the technical aspects of poetic form, including metre, with lots of examples and a good deal of humour! https://uk.bookshop.org/books/the-ode... If you’d like a step-by-step guide to filling in a metre map, check out my workshop on the Shakespearean sonnet!    • How to Write a Shakespearean Sonnet -...   ​​ This workshop is facilitated by Dr. Katie Ailes, a researcher, educator, and poet based in Edinburgh. Katie earned her PhD at the University of Strathclyde researching the performance and perception of authenticity in contemporary UK spoken word poetry and is one of the country's leading academic experts on the genre. Follow Katie’s work through her website: www.katieailes.com Thanks for watching! If you want to see more from us please make sure to subscribe. You can also help support what we do here at I Am Loud by signing up to our Patreon or giving us a like or follow on social media. Check out the links below for more info: Patreon:   / iamloud   Facebook:   / iamloud   Twitter:   / iamloudpro   Instagram:   / iamloudpro   Redbubble: https://tinyurl.com/LoudBubble Website: https://iamloud.co Sign up to our newsletter: https://eepurl.com/dxzKIL #PoeticMetre #Metre #IambicPentameter

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