Analysis Of 10 Things I Hate About You

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In my section of the anthology I chose two poems that I had known and loved since my middle school years, 10 Things I Hate About You from the 1999 movie, and Annabel Lee by Edger Allan Poe. Rounding out my set of three was a newer find of mine, A Red, Red Rose by Robert Burns. I chose the first two poems for the lasting impact that they have had on my life as a young adult, and the last because of how it affected me towards the end of my young adult years. Fitting in the larger theme of love, each of these poems respectively are charged with enough emotion to make them borderline melodramatic, which is why I selected them to represent love poetry in this young adult anthology. What is interesting about my set is that only one is actually marketed towards young adults. What makes the 10 Things I Hate About You poem so impactful is is captured the emotion and hormone changed reality that is middle school and high school. This is the most simplistic of the …show more content…

At this point I had been exposed and schooled over what constituted “good and correct” poetry and had limited myself to old works to try and seem more grown up. What I liked about this poem is that it still had the beautiful longing tone that I had enjoyed in Annabel Lee, praising beauty and everlasting love, which is something any young adult desires to feel. This poem fit inside the guidelines of proper poetry and still did not bore me, which is why I liked it so much. Repetition reassures the reader of the speakers devotion, and promises a happy future. The imagery is so beautiful and pastoral, and lends to the imagination of running across perfect fields with the person you had a crush on. It is also quite lyrical and reads as if is full of life instead of just words on a page. This poem is nice because it is a guilt free way to enjoy classic poetry, while still appealing emotionally to young adult

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