Tian2 田二
The Tian2 Study Library AP Edition · Tian2 Editorial Bureau
Volume I · MMXXVI AP English Literature and Composition
Library AP English Literature and Composition Unit 5: Poetry II
⁂   AP English Literature and Composition · Unit 5

5. Poetry II

36–45% of the AP exam. Key topics: Figurative Language (FIG): tone shifts, layered imagery, and the interplay of multiple figurative devices within a single poem, Structure (STR): poetic form as meaning — how the choice of sonnet, ode, elegy, villanelle, or free verse shapes the reader's experience, Narration (NAR): dramatic situation of the speaker, apostrophe, and the relationship between speaker and implied audience, Irony and ambiguity in poetry: verbal irony, situational irony, and productive interpretive uncertainty, Deepening tone analysis: identifying tonal complexity and shifts within a poem rather than assigning a single tone label, Q1 essay strategy: reading the supplied poem efficiently under time pressure and constructing a thesis tied to how poetic choices contribute to a unified interpretation.

36–45% exam weight standard track

Unit 5: Poetry II

Study guide content for this unit is being prepared. Check back soon for complete lesson notes, formula sheets, and worked examples.

Topics in this unit

  • Figurative Language (FIG): tone shifts, layered imagery, and the interplay of multiple figurative devices within a single poem
  • Structure (STR): poetic form as meaning — how the choice of sonnet, ode, elegy, villanelle, or free verse shapes the reader's experience
  • Narration (NAR): dramatic situation of the speaker, apostrophe, and the relationship between speaker and implied audience
  • Irony and ambiguity in poetry: verbal irony, situational irony, and productive interpretive uncertainty
  • Deepening tone analysis: identifying tonal complexity and shifts within a poem rather than assigning a single tone label
  • Q1 essay strategy: reading the supplied poem efficiently under time pressure and constructing a thesis tied to how poetic choices contribute to a unified interpretation