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Asyndeton & Polysyndeton: The Power of Coordinating Con Asyndeton & Polysyndeton: The Power of Coordinating Con

Asyndeton & Polysyndeton: The Power of Coordinating Con - PowerPoint Presentation

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Asyndeton & Polysyndeton: The Power of Coordinating Con - PPT Presentation

English II PreAP What do you notice about this sentence Let the whitefolks have their money and power and segregation and  sarcasm and big houses and schools and lawns like carpets and books and mostlymostlylet them have their whiteness Maya Angelou ID: 537492

conjunctions draw polysyndeton asyndeton draw conjunctions asyndeton polysyndeton sentence words writers coordinating power create pace sections disgrace fire gallows

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Presentation Transcript

Slide1

Asyndeton & Polysyndeton: The Power of Coordinating Conjunctions!

English II Pre-APSlide2

What do you notice about this sentence?

“Let the

whitefolks

have their money and power and segregation and 

sarcasm and

big houses and schools and lawns like carpets, and books, and mostly–mostly–let them have their whiteness.” (Maya Angelou

, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings

)Slide3

And then what do you notice about this sentence?

“You could draw me to fire, you could draw me to water, you could draw me to the gallows, you could draw me to any death, you could draw me to anything I have most avoided, you could draw me to any exposure and disgrace.” (Charles Dickens,

Our Mutual Friend

)Slide4

Huh?

Writers use extra conjunctions (polysyndeton) or eliminate conjunctions (asyndeton) to control reading pace and to create meaning.Slide5

Coordinating Conjunctions

A conjunction links and relates two or more parts of a sentence

Coordinating conjunctions (FANBOYS!) connect words or groups of words

For, and, nor,

but, or

, yet, so

Writers can choose to add FANBOYS when they are not needed or can omit them where they are expected.Slide6

Polysyndeton

Using extra, unnecessary coordinating conjunctions

“Poly” = many

syn

” = with, together

“polysyndeton” = with many conjunctions

“For I have neither wit,

nor

words,

nor

worth,/Action,

nor

utterance,

nor

the power of speech/To stir men’s blood.” (William Shakespeare,

Julius Caesar

)Slide7

Polysyndeton

Places emphasis on the items between the conjunctions

Slows the pace

Often creates a serious, ponderous tone

Memoirists often use it to create nostalgia by focusing on the images between the conjunctions

Writers also use it excessively to create monotony or humor

“The rest of the house was plain

and

uncomfortable

and

noisy with the complaints of twenty relatives.” (Amy Tan,

The Joy Luck Club

)Slide8

Polysyndeton

Write a descriptive paragraph about this image.

Use polysyndeton!Slide9

Asyndeton

Not using coordinating conjunctions when they are expected

“a” = not, without

syn

” = with, together

“asyndeton” = without conjunctions

“The men left in a rush: they flung on coats, they slid kisses at everybody’s cheeks, they slammed house doors, they slammed car doors; they ground their car’s starters till the motors caught with a jump.” (Annie Dillard,

An American Childhood

)Slide10

Asyndeton

Writers use asyndeton to fuse the words (or sections) into one unit

Writers may not want to split the words (or sections) because their power or fragility may be lost if they are separated

Causes the pace to speed up

Builds tension or anticipation, and creates breathlessness or lightheartedness

Overuse can make the rhythm jerky or disconnected or make the subject seem trivial or insignificant

“The drunks, the jobless, the junkies are shadow figures of his everyday world.” (Martin Luther King, Jr.,

Why We Can’t Wait

)Slide11

Asyndeton

Write a descriptive paragraph about this image.

But now use asyndeton!Slide12

Anaphora

And just to review…

The deliberate repetition of the first part of a sentence

A form of parallelism in which both the diction and the syntax are repeated. Fun!

“You could draw me to fire, you could draw me to water, you could draw me to the gallows, you could draw me to any death, you could draw me to anything I have most avoided, you could draw me to any exposure and disgrace.” (Charles Dickens,

Our Mutual Friend

)

This sentence uses both asyndeton

and

anaphora!