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What do you get when the guy who wrote “The Raven” makes a serious effort to write in verse? Poe-try… Now, when you’ve detached your eyes f...
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American Literature 3: The Poe Must Go On (Part 1) 631 Views
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What do you get when the guy who wrote “The Raven” makes a serious effort to write in verse? Poe-try… Now, when you’ve detached your eyes from the back of your head, go ahead and give this video a look.
Transcript
- 00:04
the Poe must go on part 1
- 00:33
nice we're done. high-protein low-fat yeah I'm on the Paleo. diet hmm anyway.
- 00:40
thanks for being with us on a midnight drear,y or an afternoon sunny or wherever [raven pecks at dead Poe]
- 00:44
you happen to be watching this video. meet Edgar Allan Poe. wells little late
- 00:49
without a chance that probably for the best he was always a little less bitter. [Raven discussing Poe]
Full Transcript
- 00:52
well Poe was born in 1809 orphaned after dad skipped town and mom died
- 00:58
young. off to a good start there. a kindly couple john and frances Allen took him
- 01:02
in but a yes later wish they got enough puppy. well Poe and his dad got along
- 01:07
wonderfully. teddy boy had a gambling problem and gambled away his family's [Poe doing somersaults]
- 01:12
pennies. then the death blow he wanted to be a writer. oh so long son. you know
- 01:18
we're cheering for you. off Poe went, became a literary critic wrote, for [Poe surrounded by books]
- 01:22
Broadway journal, southern literary messenger, any publication that allowed
- 01:26
him to rip other writers to shreds, he was game. and yeah everyone loves the [literary reviews in print of Poe's work]
- 01:31
critics. well Poe's writings helped define gothic romanticism. gothic
- 01:37
romanticism tends to feature macabre element. ie gruesome and ghastly stuff
- 01:42
blood dripping from walls head torn half off really bad paper cuts. you know that
- 01:48
sort of thing. it also focuses on characters emotions. no sadness isolation
- 01:53
despair all the happy ones. and dead people got to have the dead people not
- 01:58
zombies but actual dead people. well makes sense. Poe's writing was so
- 02:02
grim and the guy was so friendless. orphaned broke despised angry and
- 02:07
resentful, well he would run today we probably be hearing about him on the [Man being interviewed by news reporter]
- 02:11
evening news he died of unknown mysterious causes in 184.9 yes of course
- 02:16
he did and the obit was harsh check it out.
- 02:27
well Poe may not have been a yes beloved figure but his work was. without [Poe's obituary on screen]
- 02:32
him this guy might have been a postal worker. this guy might have been a shoe
- 02:36
salesman. and this guy might have been a fly fisherman . Poe inspired generations of [Stephen King fishing in lake]
- 02:42
horror mystery and suspense writers. a shame nobody ever hired him as a clown
- 02:46
for their birthday party. In Poe's work there was a focus on conscience. what is
- 02:51
conscience? well you know that little voice in your heads and you probably
- 02:54
should have paid for that pack of ding-dongs? yeah that. it's that part of [Man with pack of ding-dongs]
- 02:58
us that moves the needle on our inner moral compass. another thing it goes from
- 03:02
something that's a-ok to something that you know morally iffy , to i'm gonna regret
- 03:07
that to what ever i can get away with. everything breaking bad. well Poe was [moral compass explained]
- 03:13
hooked on the idea of repressed morality. in other words he was fascinated by
- 03:17
people who knew that what they were doing was wrong but did it anyway. of [Man with pack of ding-dongs and police sirens appear]
- 03:23
course shoplifting is pretty low stakes. instead pull up the emotional ante by
- 03:28
writing about murder and deceit and well more murder. yeah beating hearts of
- 03:34
a murder victim ticking away under the floorboard. just a quick reminder by the
- 03:38
way that the murder is bad.
- 03:42
guilt over gouging out a cat's eyes with a penknife? yeah it's also [Black cat with one eye appear]
- 03:47
considered bad in America anyway even by dog lovers. like the dingdong thing pales
- 03:53
in comparison. but not everyone's viewed conscience the way Poe did. look at the [Raven eats ding dongs off dead Poe]
- 03:57
Puritans for a second. you guys had the word pure in their name. ok we did that.
- 04:02
all they had to do was spit out an evil word or show a little ankle and they're
- 04:07
guilty conscience would go into overdrive. but for the Puritans they're [Puritans heads explode]
- 04:12
guilty conscience brought them closer to God, so there was an upside. for Poe it was an
- 04:18
awareness of guilt that anchored your morals. whatever made you feel guilty
- 04:22
framed your vision of what was good and bad in the world. and to bring home [Eye in a picture frame]
- 04:26
Puritanism on steroids. Poe had that guilt haunt you until you went mad. Bet he
- 04:32
was a fun guy he also did party trick this bar mitzvah. Poe was influenced by
- 04:37
five-dollar words transcendentalism. that's trans, I mean beyond or a cross, and the
- 04:45
Latin sender in the order ie climbing. so the word all together basically means
- 04:51
climbing beyond. or surpassing a usual state of being. well the philosophy
- 04:55
stresses the importance of self-reliance and independence. it says that you can
- 04:59
achieve happiness enlightenment even through isolation. just another way of [Buddha appears]
- 05:04
saying you need some three times. well this guy Emerson had a lot to do with
- 05:08
making the entire movement happen. emerson wrote an essay self-reliance [Emerson's most famous works listed]
- 05:14
about the dangers of conformity IE go along with what everyone else is doing.
- 05:19
peer pressure anyone? Emerson wanted everyone to follow their own instincts
- 05:23
and stick to their own ideals. in his opinion it was the only path toward true [Dorothy on a yellow brick road]
- 05:27
happiness and self-fulfillment. if instead you just went with the flow and
- 05:31
astride to a herd mentality and we're doomed to get crushed by the rest of the
- 05:37
herd. and then there's this fellow henry david Thoreau. and he spent a lot of time
- 05:42
hanging out alone in the woods with his favorite person henry david Thoreau. yeah [Henry Thoreau key works appear]
- 05:47
and there was his locality a cabin near Walden pond.
- 05:52
Solicitors laughed. like ever since the Thoreau felt someone could become happier
- 05:57
and more enlightenment by being isolated. Poe on the other hand thought that by
- 06:02
spending time only with your miserable self you could become well miserable. go [Man crying alone with a teddy]
- 06:09
figure. and more prepared to welcome desolation and death. yeah well someone
- 06:13
just hang out with him for half an hour. please give them a foot rub or something.
- 06:17
okay let's dive into one of Poe's masterpieces. we're assuming you've [Poe portrait appears]
- 06:20
actually read the thing, so here we go. Fall of the House of Usher. quick recap
- 06:27
our unnamed narrator shows up at his friend Roderick assured mansion which is
- 06:31
badly in need of a home makeover. Roderick and his sister Madeline are [narrator looks at a cracking mansion under a red moon]
- 06:35
sick both mentally and physically and Madeline soon kicks the bucket. the guy's
- 06:39
into her in a vault under the mansion but woo she seems quite dead. she comes
- 06:45
back for revenge killing her bro and dying herself from reals this time. and
- 06:49
then the entire house crashes into the ground. you know typical [House cracks and collapses]
- 06:52
brother-sister stuff. pass the salt. you may want to get the story one more read
- 06:57
as you do read it and yes people actually read it don't just crack the
- 07:01
cover. look for these literary elements: narrative voice- that's the person or
- 07:06
persons telling us the story. in this case our unnamed narrator. look for
- 07:11
setting- where stuff goes down. the big spooky mansion that could use a power
- 07:16
wash. look for symbolism- something that represents something else like the crack
- 07:21
in the mansion that represents the crack in the brother-sister relationship. and
- 07:25
spoiler alert there sorry. right look for imagery vivid descriptions like the
- 07:30
unnatural light of a faintly luminous and distinctly visible gaseous
- 07:35
exhalation. and look for tone- the writers attitude or approach to the story. so [symbolism and imagery defined]
- 07:41
we've got some typical Poe on our hands here. how do we know? well look at the
- 07:44
first four sentences. dull dark dreary melancholy gloom bleak. yeah talk about
- 07:50
setting. the mood okay first up. narrative voice well this story is told in [Narrative voice definition appears]
- 07:54
first-person. Why? well why can't we just be a fly on the wall watching two other
- 07:59
characters Joe Blow and his friend Roderick chillin at the mansion. well for
- 08:03
one thing Joe Blow would be a dumb name for [Roderick and Narrator standing over man]
- 08:05
protagonist but writing in first-person Poe takes us into the story. we're not
- 08:10
just impartial observers it's more inclusive. we're enveloped in the story .if
- 08:16
half dead freak jumps out of a closet they're not jumping at some random [A narrow corridor appears]
- 08:20
character, they're jumping at us. that whirring blades about to chop us in half.
- 08:25
that killer squirrel with a bazooka has us in its sights. yes what first person [Squirrel holding a bazooka]
- 08:31
brings the intensity, makes us involved forces us to take part puts us in the
- 08:37
driver's seat of a car that's about to go over side of a cliff. yep thank you. [road block]
- 08:41
okay now for the setting. well you know a setting is important when it's in the
- 08:46
title of the story. few authors have written setting better than Poe. he [Poe appears in a green mist]
- 08:51
doesn't just establish the environment to create a spoon the atmosphere, he
- 08:55
makes the setting itself a character in the story. the carnival full of deranged
- 09:00
carnival workers is a start but makes a carnival alive and now you're cooking. a
- 09:06
ferris wheel that spins riders off into space, a merry-go-round where the animals [Ferris wheel spinning]
- 09:11
eat you. not so merry. well in Assure, our narrator spends a lot of time up front
- 09:17
describing the setting to us. like you usually do with a character. doors blow [Raven talking beside dead Poe]
- 09:23
open by themselves the entire house cracked in two and then synced into a
- 09:27
lake. so yeah. if it was just some run-of-the-mill house where everything
- 09:31
took place while the setting wouldn't do much to add to the scary claustrophobic
- 09:35
feel of the story. instead this place is held in house form. what about symbolism? [House in flames]
- 09:42
and imagery? well first symbolism which is a literary device that uses one for
- 09:46
the story to represent something else. usually something deeper, or more
- 09:50
abstract. like at the end of the story our narrator describes a blood-red moon
- 09:55
overhead. paints a pretty picture of a red moon yeah but it also points to the [red moon]
- 10:00
murder and horror that's been playing out at the house of usher. author uses
- 10:04
symbolism to get us thinking on multiple levels. otherwise we might as well be
- 10:08
watching on TV.and there's imagery which is advice where an author uses [Poe with teddy watching TV]
- 10:14
highly descriptive language to cement an image in our head.
- 10:18
the precipitous brink of a black and lurid Tarn that lay an unruffled luxor
- 10:24
by the dwelling. that isn't saying there's a lake by the house yo. yes it'll
- 10:29
do that, Poe took his time with word joy. time he probably could have spent making [Poe at a desk writing]
- 10:33
friends, but uh well. he mentioned roderick painting an underground tomb
- 10:38
foreshadowing what would happen to madeline perhaps? like why else
- 10:43
would you paint a tomb? bored much? Roderick's foreshadowing about the decline of [Roderick singing]
- 10:48
a house. at the end of the story of the house literally declined. not just the
- 10:53
structure itself that's dilapidated but people who live inside of it. there are
- 10:57
reflection references. narrator sees inverted reflection of the mansion in
- 11:02
the tarn, ie in the lake. Madeline roderick are reflections of each other.
- 11:06
male female mental physical alive dead mac pc. and there's that crack in the [Roderick and Madeline pictured]
- 11:12
mansion assign the whole place is about to come crashing down. also the sign that
- 11:17
there are cracks in the brother-sister relationship. those two could use some [Man fixing a toilet and Madeleine appears]
- 11:20
serious family bonding time. well finally there's all the image Poe uses
- 11:25
to establish atmosphere. vacant eye like windows. feeble gleams oven crimson light. [Eyes peering through windows]
- 11:32
the dark and tattered draperies which tortured into motion by the breath of a
- 11:37
rising tempest, swayed fitfully to and and fro upon the walls. is it a wonder this
- 11:42
guy had trouble booking babysitting gigs? on come on. all right what about tone?
- 11:46
well in other words what's the author trying to do to us? is he trying to lift
- 11:51
our spirits by being upbeat? bring us down by being depressing? freaked us out
- 11:56
by creating suspense ?make us pee ourselves by scaring us silly? huh and we [Emojis appear]
- 12:01
never did that. well the voice setting in imagery all sort of contribute to the
- 12:05
tone. there like a vibe sausage. sure together they combine to give us a
- 12:10
general sense of unease, like this is not a place we'd like to take a holiday.
- 12:15
we're left with a storyteller who's filled with anxiety and since his entire [People visiting Disneyland appear at the house]
- 12:20
yarn while in the state of terror. another opposed classic non bird
- 12:24
related poem is Annabel Lee. if you've got the gumption read that one, and look [Annabel Lee pictured]
- 12:29
from the same literary elements of narrative voice setting symbolism
- 12:34
imagery and tone. as for me while our relationship is now ended. you shall see
- 12:40
me Nevermore. That's my signature line. I have to go there
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