Affiliation:
1. Northwestern University
Abstract
Students can readily engage in summary and literal sense-making when reading poems, short stories, and other literary texts, but are often unable to construct inferences and thematic interpretations of these works. This paper discusses the results of an instructional intervention built on an affect-based model of literary interpretation. Students in the intervention group spent four weeks reading and writing about popular and canonical texts, with a focus on poetry. As they read, they identified valence-laden language, made appraisals of valence, and then explained or justified their appraisals. Analyses of pre- and post-test results show that the intervention group made significant gains in the level of interpretive responses to poems compared to a control group of students who were not explicitly taught to engage in affective appraisal. This work sheds light on ways in which affect-based interpretive strategies can support novice readers’ interpretive practices.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Cited by
19 articles.
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1. A Life with Poetry;Linguistic Approaches to Literature;2023-02-08
2. Poetry Writing Skills and Literary Appreciation Behavior;Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Language, Literature, and Education (ICLLE-5 2022);2022
3. How Feeling Supports Students’ Interpretive Discussions About Literature;Journal of Literacy Research;2021-11-15
4. Facilitating Reading Engagement in Shared Reading;Poetics Today;2021-06-01
5. Text and discourse models as knowledge formats;SHS Web of Conferences;2021