Close Reading vs. Big Picture Reading Strategies
In this lesson, learn about two different approaches to reading a work of literature: big picture strategies and close reading strategies. Discover how these two perspectives can be put into practice through examples from the play 'Romeo and Juliet.'
Close Reading and Big-Picture Reading
Remember the Sesame Street sketch where everyone's favorite fuzzy blue character, Grover, demonstrates the difference between the concepts near and far? Grover runs close to the camera, arms flailing, and screams, 'Near!' and then he runs far away from the camera, yelling, 'Far!'
Grover provides us with a good visual to represent what we will cover in this lesson. Big-picture reading and close reading are two ways of looking at a work of literature. They use varying strategies to provide different kinds of information about a text.
One type approach to reading, big-picture reading, is the 'far' view. Seeing things from a distance allows us to make generalizations, and see patterns and overarching themes we can use to describe a work of literature as a whole.
Close reading is the 'near' perspective. It's an up-close look at literature, shining a light on the small choices made by the author, including word choice, character actions, and symbolic objects.
Just as Grover remains Grover regardless if he is near or far away, looking at the big picture and the smaller details in a work of literature doesn't change what the novel, poem or play is about. We just focus on different things due to our perspective.,
Close-Reading Strategies
Close reading requires us to take a deeper look at the choices authors make at the word, sentence and paragraph level. Readers must become detectives, investigating things like repeating sounds, word choices and figurative language, and their effect on the text.
Let's use the first few lines of Shakespeare's well-known tragedy, Romeo and Juliet, as a model for some close-reading strategies. First, the text:
Two households, both alike in dignity,
fair Verona, where we lay our scene,
From ancient grudge break to new mutiny,
Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean.