19 pages • 38 minutes read
Julio NoboaA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
“Identity” is written in free verse, a form that is common in Modernist and American Romantic poetry and that was popularized, in part, by the works of Walt Whitman. Free verse is unique among poetic forms due to its lack of formal constraints, but that does not mean it’s not without some formal qualities.
Often, poets dictate the form and meter of free verse by patterns of speech and the collection of ideas rather than by line count and rhythm. The organizing principle of Noboa Polanco’s poem, for instance, is the alternating description of flowers and weeds. Though some lines in “Identity” fall into an iambic meter (a metrical foot that has an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable), the number of feet vary per line, and the iambic rhythm is not consistent. One of the things that distinguishes free verse from most prose writing is the way that free verse still utilizes poetic devices, including line divisions. In this way, free verse can be seen as a freer expression of poetic ideas and images, as it is not constrained by formal rules.
Animals in Literature
View Collection
Hispanic & Latinx American Literature
View Collection
Philosophy, Logic, & Ethics
View Collection
Poems of Conflict
View Collection
Poetry: Animal Symbolism
View Collection
Poetry: Perseverance
View Collection
Political Poems
View Collection
Required Reading Lists
View Collection
Science & Nature
View Collection
Short Poems
View Collection