Christina Rossetti Delivery Guide
Christina Rossetti Delivery Guide
Christina Rossetti Delivery Guide
Delivery Guide
H472
ENGLISH
LITERATURE
Christina Rossetti
December 2014
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A LEVEL
ENGLISH LITERATURE
CONTENTS
Introduction Page 4
Thinking conceptually Page 7
Thinking contextually Page 11
Learner Resources Page 14
Introduction
Introduction
Activities
Resources
This exercise will introduce students to the range of literary terminology relevant to the set poems. Establishing a poetic
vocabulary focused upon the techniques that occur in Rossetti, will help students gain confidence in close reading and analysis.
It is important to avoid swamping students with indiscriminate lists of terms they might struggle to understand and that will not
help them discuss Rossettis poetic strategies. A focused poetic vocabulary (please see Learner Resource 1.1) will deter students
from the kind of commentary that treats verse as another kind of narrative. It will also avoid readings that spot poetic features
regardless of their effect. Activities that require students (for example) to match cards printed with selected poetic features to
others with their definitions and then to match the definitions to examples from poems, will foster an informed understanding
of Rossettis poetic practice. Teachers can utilise online resources in compiling tailor-made worksheets/card packs covering terms,
definitions and examples. http://www.english.cam.ac.uk/classroom/terms.htm , http://www.poetryfoundation.org http://rpo.
library.utoronto.ca/glossary
Learner
Resource
1.1
Students find analysing poetry and drama texts as discrete entities relatively unproblematic but can struggle to make cross-genre
comparisons. Comparison exercises that juxtapose short extracts from poems and drama, supported by questions that guide
students to the kinds of comparisons that might be drawn, can help them see how texts can be read alongside each other. Any
short extract might be substituted for those used in the model activity provided (please see Learner Resource 1.2 ) and teachers
are free to adapt the questions on the grid to suit particular partner extracts or encourage more sophisticated comparisons.
Extracts can be taken from set texts but using unfamiliar texts will widen students experience of literature. The confidence
students gain from comparison activities will improve their analysis across the specification as a whole.
Learner
Resource
1.2
A good way of encouraging students to realise how they might make comparisons across the range of Rossetti poems is to
provide them with a grid within which they can organise the poems according to categories such as theme, form and content
(please see Learner Resource 1.3). The grid should be given to students as soon as they begin to study the poems and should
be updated as their reading progresses. Students will begin to see that some poems fit more than one category. For instance,
Goblin Market is a poem which sits within at least three categories: it employs Dialogue, introduces Personas and places them
within a Dramatic Situation. Discovering such overlaps should help students to see how the poems, far from being reducible to
any unitary category or single meaning, invite complex and shifting reinterpretation. This apparently simple placing activity will
generate complex outcomes in terms of understanding.
Learner
Resource
1.3
Introduction
Activities
Resources
Students need to develop an informed understanding of key contextual matters relating to the production and reception of the
poems. Some of the preconceptions they bring to their study of Rossetti as a Victorian woman will be coloured by the kinds of
received stereotypes that can only be dispelled by carefully focused research. To ensure that their research (whether conducted
individually, in pairs or as a group enterprise) generates relevant and focused insights, students will need careful direction. The
worksheet activity provided (please see Learner Resource 1.4) sets out some key areas along with accompanying questions
that will guide students and direct their research so that it is sharply focused upon Rossetti and avoids any uninformed and
generalised overview.
Learner
Resource
1.4
In reading and responding to Rossettis poems, students should be aware of a range of interpretations, they should be able to
comment upon and evaluate different interpretations in the light of their own readings. Interpretation begins, of course, with
close-reading and class discussion. To introduce students to a wider range of possible readings, teachers can guide them to
on-line resources (http://victorianweb.org , http://www.poetryfoundation.org , http://crossref-it.info ) and to journal articles,
critical essays and introductions in popular editions of Rossettis poems. The activity provided (Learner Resource 1.5) is designed
to help students research and provide textual evidence to support a range of suggested interpretations of Goblin Market.
The grid can be adapted to other poems.
Learner
Resource
1.5
Thinking Conceptually
Thinking Conceptually
Thinking Conceptually
Activities
Resources
Students should familiarise themselves with a range of critical approaches to Rossettis poetry as a means of developing informed
and personal critical perspectives of their own. Close reading of the poems in class and through follow-up discussion will
introduce students to the different interpretations that their peers generate. They should also be directed (either individually
or as a group research activity) to sites such as those listed below which discuss approaches and provide links to other useful
resources. Teachers should ensure that students research is sharply focused and has a tangible outcome: it might lead, for
instance, to a group presentation or contribute to the production of a critical approaches booklet to be shared with the class.
http://victorianweb.org/authors/crossetti/harrison2/1.html#approaches
http://www.bbc.co.uk/poetryseason/poets/christina_rossetti.shtml
http://www.poetryfoundation.org/learning/
The basis of students study of the poems in preparation for written examination must be the kind of teacher guided close
reading that will allow students to test ideas and develop confidence in their ability to generate informed, personal and creative
readings. Lesson plans designed to support students reading skills can be accessed using the link below. Class discussion of the
poems should be presented as a preparation to writing about them. Writing might focus, at first, upon individual poems but
should be extended to incorporate discussion of context and allow connections to be made and interpretations tested.
http://crossref-it.info/files/files/Rosetti_b_Goblin_Market.pdf
Students should have knowledge of the themes that underpin the poems they are studying. The sites listed below provide a
useful base from which to begin their research into Rossettis themes and provide useful links to further resources. Encouraging
students to capture their research using the kind of grid structures provided under the activities for Content, will help to ensure
that the outcomes of their research will be clearly presented in a format that is easily assimilated.
http://cross-ref.info/textguide/christina-rosetti-selected-poems/28/0
http://victorianweb.org/authors/crossetti/moller6.html
http://www.poetryfoundation.org/bio/christina-rossetti
Thinking Conceptually
Activities
Resources
For an introduction to matters of gender in Rossettis poems the Victorian Web is a good starting place. Students should be
made aware that the implied gender relations in Rossettis poems are not always as straightforward as they might at first appear.
Though poems such as From the Antique might be said to present a womans lot as despairingly inferior to that of mans, this
view of gender must be considered alongside the mocking confidence revealed in No, Thank You, John. The link below will
provide an authoritative starting point to discuss gender, focused on individual poems.
http://victorianweb.org
Students can gain much from considering Rossettis use of voice in the poems (please see Learner Resource 1.6). This lesson plan
focuses upon this aspect as it can be explored in Song: When I am dead, my dearest.
Learner
Resource
1.6
10
Thinking Contextually
11
Thinking Contextually
Activities
Resources
Students should be aware of Christina Rossettis connection to the Pre-Raphaelite brotherhood and be able to discuss the ways
that this movement influences her poems. A general introduction to Pre-Raphaelite painters can be found at:
http://www.victorianweb.org/painting/prb/index.html
A discussion of Christina Rossettis connection to the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood can be read at:|
http://classiclit.about.com/library/bl-etexts/rfletcher/bl-rfletcher-history-11-rossetti.htm.
A class activity to consolidate students research into this area of context might require students to discuss the extent to which
characteristic elements of Pre-Raphaelite painting (realism and symbolism, precise photographic detail, eroticism) are reflected
in Christina Rossettis poetry. A useful starting place for such consideration would be Goblin Market with its lush vowel sounds,
sexual connotations and sensual descriptions. Students might link their analysis of the poems to specific paintings.
No artist works in a vacuum. Students should be able to place Rossettis poems within their historical context and to consider
her responses to contemporaneous events. As always, their research needs to be carefully focused upon events relevant to the
discussion of the poems. The worksheet activity provided (Learner Resource 1.7) sets out salient historical events which students
should research, date and relate to the poems. Armed with this kind of contextual knowledge, students will be better placed to
consider questions about the extent to which Rossetti might be considered a conservative poet resistant to the social advances
of her time that point towards gender equality. The research activity should be followed up in class where knowledge of the
historical context should inform discussion of the poems and/or form the basis for collaborative activities in which research is
shared, extended and debated.
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Learner
Resource
1.7
Thinking Contextually
Activities
Resources
The Literary context: Given that Component 1 requires students to compare Rossettis poems with a drama text, they should
be aware that during the period she wrote, drama was far from a flourishing genre. The period was, however, a golden era for
both poetry and the novel, fuelled by unprecedented growth in literacy and the availability of literature to a growing readership
through inexpensive editions and circulating libraries. Rossettis was also an era in which women writers were acquiring a
wide readership. Women writers wrote knowing that there was an audience for their work. Activities can be set that involve
researching: a) the periods most prominent writers, b) the female literary characters to which the period gave rise, c) the point at
which the New Woman emerged as literary concept and social reality.
The research activity set out in Learner Resource 1.8 requires students to contextualise Rossettis poems in the light of
contemporaneous gender, educational, artistic and religious factors. Its purpose is to help students think about the ways that,
given the social and gender movements of her time, Rossetti might be seen as a contradictory figure: one who quite clearly had
sympathy for other women but who was, simultaneously, resistant to changes that readers in the 21st century would view as
essential in improving womens place in society.
The poems should be read and analysed with an awareness of the contexts in which they were composed. The lesson plan
(Learner Resource 1.9) provides an activity that requires students to draw upon research they have conducted into the various
contexts of Rossettis poems and relate that research to their reading of From the Antique. The format for this activity can be
adapted to support discussion of other poems.
13
Learner
Resource
1.8
Learner
Resource
1.9
apostrophe
alliteration
archaism
anaphora
antithesis
allusion
anaphora
ballad meter
couplet
conventional poetic
vocabulary
caesura
dialogue
enjambment
euphemism
image
imperative
implicit responder/response
lyric/ lyrical
pentameter
pronouns
personification
quatrain
refrain
symbol
syntax
simile
sonnet
sestet
octave
volta
declarative
hyperbaton
14
See
page 5
Learner resource 1.2 Comparison Exercise: Drama and Poetry pre 1900 (Component 01)
Read the following two extracts then complete the grid below:
Text A:
Text B:
Sailing To Byzantium
II
King Lear
Lear:
W.B.Yeats (1910)
William Shakespeare
15
See
page 5
Learner resource 1.2 Comparison Exercise: Drama and Poetry pre 1900 (Component 01), cont.
W.B.Yeats
What is the subject of the extract?
16
Shakespeare
See
page 5
AFTERLIFE
DESPAIR/RESIGNATION
DRAMATIC SITUATION
NATURE
PERSONAS
RELIGIOUS
JOYFUL
ASSERTIVE VOICE
17
See
page 5
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
18
See
page 6
The teacher should read the poem aloud to the class adopting
an unexpressive voice (i.e. one that, as far as possible, reveals
no emotion).
the tone of the poem and what this suggests about the
speakers status relative to dearest;
Stanza 2.
19
Questions to consider:
Does this exercise raise questions about power relations
between the speaker and dearest?
Does this exercise raise questions about how Rossetti, as a
Christian, presents the afterlife?
Does the speaker relish the idea of oblivion?
Does this discussion throw light upon any other poems?
Students should support their responses to these
questions with close reference to the poem.
20
Date
Implications/Rossettis views
*This list of historical contexts is NOT exhaustive nor is it prescriptive; your research will uncover other important events.
21
See
page 10
Learner resource 1.7 Christina Rossetti: reading From the Antique in context
See
page 12
states: Or, better than any being, were not (l.4). What is it
that the speaker seems to desire? To change gender or to
embrace oblivion and be nothing at all in the world? (l.5)
What do you take the tone of the poem to be: tonguein-cheek, despairing, angry, resigned, protesting, suicidal?
Support your response by referring to the poem.
How, in stanza 3, does the speaker give a sense that her
obliteration from the world would count for nothing? Do you
detect any sense of regret conveyed in the stanza?
The speaker at first claims: I wish I were a man (l.3), and then
You should bear in mind the fact that the speaker of the
poem is not necessarily Rossetti.
22
Artistic influences
Religion
These guide questions will help you focus your research on an understanding of contexts that
is relevant to Christina Rossetti.
Did Rossetti only write poetry?
Were there other women writing during this period? Who were they? What kinds of texts did they
produce?
Make a list of the most prominent literary texts published during Rossettis life: who wrote them?
Which genres were most popular? Were women free to publish using their own names?
How were women represented in the literature of Rossettis time?
Find out about: The Society for the Employment of Women; the Married Womens Property Acts; the
Contagious Diseases Acts; when the age of sexual consent was raised to 16.
Find out about Rossettis connection to: Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon; Harriet Martineau; Mary
Howitt; Jean Ingelow; Augusta Webster.
Find out what connects Rossetti and Josephine Butler.
When was university entrance and medical education opened to women?
What were Rossettis views on education for women?
What were Rossettis views on votes for women?
How was Rossetti connected to the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood?
Find out what characters and narratives the Pre-Raphaelites represented in their paintings.
How do you think Pre-Raphaelite art influenced Rossettis writing?
Research the terms: Anglo-Catholic and High Anglican.
Find out what relevance these terms have to Rossetti.
Find out about Rossettis work with fallen women in Highgate.
What might this work suggest about Rossettis sympathies and sense of moral obligation?
What narrative poem was composed whilst Rossetti was working at Highgate? Is there a connection
between her work and the poem?
23
See
page 13
24
See
page 13
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