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Resarch

 

 

Kanade

-written c. 2150-1400 BCE

-Gilgamesh existed in the real world.

-written in Akkadian language

-Gilgamesh is the earliest major recorded work of literature

-First human hero in literature

-reveals importance of friendship, love, pride and honor, adventure and accomplishment, and fear of death, wish of immortality.

-written at least 1300 years before Homer wrote Iliad and Odyssey

-scene of flood like Bible

-Gilgamesh learns lasting fame is immortality.

<= But because of Enkidu’s death...

 

Midori

  • Known as 'Bilgames’ in the Sumerian, 'Gilgamos’ in Greek

  • oldest piece of epic western literature.

  • The best preserved version of the story comes from the Babylonian writer Shin-Leqi-Unninni (wrote 1300-1000 BCE) who translated, edited, and may have embellished upon, the original story.

  • Gilgamesh’s father was the Priest-King Lugalbanda

  • c. 2600 BCE Uruk ruled by Gilgamesh for 126 years according to the Sumerian King List.

  • Historical evidence for Gilgamesh’s existence is found in inscriptions crediting him with the building of the great walls of Uruk (modern day Warka, Iraq) which, in the story, are the tablets upon which he first records his great deeds and his quest for the meaning of life.

B. Time Period, Setting, History, and Culture Background

C. Element of Poetry (General) -Elice

Alliteration: The repetition of identical consonant sounds, most often the sounds beginning words, in close proximity. Example: pensive poets, nattering nabobs of negativism.

 

Anaphora: Repetition of the same word or phrase at the beginning of a line throughout a work or the section of a work.

 

Assonance: The repetition of identical vowel sounds in different words in close proximity. Example: deep green sea.

 

Common meter or hymn measure (Emily Dickinson): iambic tetrameter alternating with iambic trimeter. Other example: "Amazing Grace" by John Newton

 

Couplet: two successive rhyming lines. Couplets end the pattern of a Shakespearean sonnet.

 

Diction: Diction is usually used to describe the level of formality that a speaker uses.

 

•   Diction (formal or high): Proper, elevated, elaborate, and often polysyllabic language. This type of language used to be thought the only type suitable for poetry

 

•   Neutral or middle diction: Correct language characterized by directness and simplicity.

 

•   Diction (informal or low): Relaxed, conversational and familiar language.

 

Dramatic monologue: A type of poem, derived from the theater, in which a speaker addresses an internal listener or the reader.  In some dramatic monologues, especially those by Robert Browning, the speaker may reveal his personality in unexpected and unflattering ways.

 

Heroic couplet: two successive rhyming lines of iambic pentameter; the second line is usually end-stopped.

 

Hymn meter or common measure: quatrains of iambic tetrameter alternating with iambic trimeter rhyming a b a b.

 

Hyperbole (overstatement) and litotes (understatement): Hyperbole is exaggeration for effect; litotes is understatement for effect, often used for irony.

 

Iambic pentameter: Iamb (iambic): an unstressed stressed foot. The most natural and common kind of meter in English; it elevates speech to poetry.

 

Image: Images are references that trigger the mind to fuse together memories of sight (visual), sounds (auditory), tastes (gustatory), smells (olfactory), and sensations of touch (tactile). Imagery refers to images throughout a work or throughout the works of a writer or group of writers.

 

Internal rhyme: An exact rhyme (rather than rhyming vowel sounds, as with assonance) within a line of poetry: "Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary."

 

Metaphor: A comparison between two unlike things, this describes one thing as if it were something else. Does not use "like" or "as" for the comparison

 

Metaphysical conceit: An elaborate and extended metaphor or simile that links two apparently unrelated fields or subjects in an unusual and surprising conjunction of ideas. The term is commonly applied to the metaphorical language of a number of early seventeenth-century poets, particularly John Donne. Example: stiff twin compasses//the joining together of lovers like legs of a compass. See "To His Coy Mistress"

 

Meter: The number of feet within a line of traditional verse. Example: iambic pentameter.

 

Octave: The first eight lines of an Italian or Petrarchan sonnet, unified by rhythm, rhyme, and topic.

 

Onomatopoeia. A blending of consonant and vowel sounds designed to imitate or suggest the activity being described. Example: buzz, slurp.

 

Paradox: A rhetorical figure embodying a seeming contradiction that is nonetheless true.

 

Personification: Attributing human characteristics to nonhuman things or abstractions.

 

Refrain: repeated word or series of words in response or counterpoint to the main verse, as in a ballad.

 

Rhyme: The repetition of identical concluding syllables in different words, most often at the ends of lines. Example: June--moon.

 

•   Double rhyme or trochaic rhyme: rhyming words of two syllables in which the first syllable is accented (flower, shower)

 

•   Triple rhyme or dactylic rhyme: Rhyming words of three or more syllables in which any syllable but the last is accented. Example: Macavity/gravity/depravity

 

•   Eye rhyme: Words that seem to rhyme because they are spelled identically but pronounced differently. Example: bear/fear, dough/cough/through/bough

 

•   Slant rhyme: A near rhyme in which the concluding consonant sounds are identical but not the vowels. Example: sun/noon, should/food, slim/ham.

 

•   Rhyme scheme: The pattern of rhyme, usually indicated by assigning a letter of the alphabet to each rhyme at the end of a line of poetry.

 

Sestet: A six-line stanza or unit of poetry.

 

Shakespearean sonnet: A fourteen-line poem written in iambic pentameter, composed of three quatrains and a couplet rhyming abab cdcd efef gg.

 

Simile. A direct comparison between two dissimilar things; uses "like" or "as" to state the terms of the comparison.

 

Sonnet: A closed form consisting of fourteen lines of rhyming iambic pentameter.

 

Shakespearean or English sonnet: 3 quatrains and a couplet, often with three arguments or images in the quatrains being resolved in the couplet. Rhyme scheme: abab cdcd efef gg

 

Petrarchan or Italian sonnet: 8 lines (the "octave") and 6 lines (the "sestet") of rhyming iambic pentameter, with a turning or "volta" at about the 8th line. Rhyme scheme: abba abba cdcdcd (or cde cde)

 

Stanza: A group of poetic lines corresponding to paragraphs in prose; the meters and rhymes are usually repeating or systematic.

 

Synaesthesia: A rhetorical figure that describes one sensory impression in terms of a different sense, or one perception in terms of a totally different or even opposite feeling.  Example: "darkness visible" "green thought"

 

Syntax: Word order and sentence structure.

 

 

 

 



 

D. Elements of Poetry (Old English epic poems) -Hana

Alliteration - Two syllables alliterate when they begin with the same sound; all vowels alliterate together, but the consonant clusters st-, sp- and sc- are treated as separate sounds.

 

Accent - A line of poetry in Old English consists two half-lines or verses, distichs, with a pause or caesura, in the middle of the time. Each half-line has two accented syllables.

 

These following two elements are thing that i can only find out from internet. I am really sorry for being late to tell you guys about this.

 

 

E. Blending between Fact & Fiction within Gilgamesh -Yuri

Epic of Gilgamesh is over the legendary king Gilgamesh of ancient Mesopotamia that might have been real story . Hero of Gilgamesh, he was a real king that was Sumerian city state Uruk in about 2600 BCE. According to the Sumerian King List he reigned there in Lira son 127 years. But in the posterity of mythology, he is the son of Lugalbanda. Archaeological historical materials related to Gilgamesh itself has not been found at present , but is a leading theory to the Gilgamesh the king was also real from the fact that real Enmebaragesi King appeared with Gilgamesh has been confirmed in the legend. He appeared in a number of myths , but does not know the actual figure of his. The posterity of tradition there is also a statement that conquered this description and model and fight as Gilgamesh was a great Conqueror, it is believed to be the one person that got a hegemonic position in Sumer. That it has built the walls of Uruk to other as his performance is important , it has been cited in Babylon the first dynasty. Gilgamesh the king after the death soon deification are many myths, appearing in the epic .

 

A. General Gilgamesh Background

  • Gilgamesh is the semi-mythic King of Uruk best known from The Epic of Gilgamesh the great Sumerian/Babylonian poetic work which pre-dates Homer ’s writing by 1500 years and, therefore, stands as the oldest piece of epic western literature 

  • The Epic of Gilgamesh is written in Akkadian, the Babylonians' language, on eleven tablets, with a fragmentary appendix on a twelfth.

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