CONFESSIONAL MODE IN POETRY OF KAMALA DAS Confessional mode of writing has its virtual origin in the mid50s in America. It is hybrid mode of poetry which means objective‚ analytical or even clinical observation of incidents from one’s own life. Confessional poems are intensely personal and highly subjective. There is no ‘persona’ in the poems. ‘I’ in the poems is the poet and nobody else. The themes are nakedly embarrassing and focus too exclusively upon the pain‚ anguish and ugliness of life at
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Both stories feature teenagers growing up in the 50’s trying to find their true identity while juggling the everyday struggles of being a teen. Catcher in the Rye follows a 17 year old boy named holden who has been dealt a bad hand of cards. His younger brother passed away from leukemia and it changed his life completely. J.D Salinger uses loss in this book to shape how Holden acts and views the rest of the world. It really is the main cause of his inner hatred for himself and others‚ because he
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Poetry Analysis Essay Outline Imagery & Conflict Daddy Poems Underline thesis and circle examples and lines. Concrete examples. Sylvia – Daddy Imagery: “a bag full of God” (this was possibility a representation of how she saw her father or how her father saw himself) “Gray toe” (once you die your body slowly decays and loses colour‚ such as how the words are placed like gray toe to show death‚ represent death) “The tongue stuck in my jaw. It stuck in a barb wire snare.” (This part
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Bright Scholars • This poem is about when he first saw Plath • Use of first person‚ draws us in. painstaking his own memory • "Where was it‚ in the strand? A display"- Questioning his memory. • "A picture of that year’s intake....."- Follows up with a series of statements. • "You" become the addressee • Very tightly Structured • Veronica Lake- actor • "Your Veronica Lake bang. Not what it hid"- Plath had a scar on her face • "It was the first fresh peach
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source of social status and contentment. • Plath suggests that the government‚ consumerism and the patriarchy cause the dehumanization of people‚ especially women who are restricted to the stereotype of the household wife. This is demonstrated in the repetition of the word‚ “It” in place of “She” or any other more personal term. The US promoted the domestic lifestyle image‚ which is expressed in The Applicant “A living doll‚ everywhere you look.” Plath voices her opinion on the way that women were
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“Fiesta 1980” and “Daddy” Both poems are about memories of the relationship with their father. However‚ the experiences are very different. The children presented in “Fiesta 1980” by Junot Diaz and “Daddy” by Silvia Plath suffers an internal struggle because of their fathers. In “Fiesta 1980” there is a chance to improve the relationship where as in “Daddy” there is no hope because the father is dead. In “Fiesta 1980” we can tell the story is told in the first person by and adolescent Latino
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Plath writes her body is a “thirty year old cargo boat” (4th Stanza: 1st Line) which “sinks out of sight”(4th Stanza: 6th Line) (Dobbs‚ 2000). She is the cargo boat‚ loaded past her maximum ability; she falls victim to the exhaustion of her responsibilities
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Plath views the world in an insightful and unusual way. She has a meticulous eye for detail which is evident in all her poems. Her poetry is confessional‚ in the sense that it is often an obsessive analysis of herself. The exploration of identity is apparent in poems that I have studied. These poems are ‘Morning Song’‚ ‘Child’‚ ‘Black Rook in Rainy Weather’ (BRR)‚ ‘Mirror’ and ‘The Arrival of the Bee Box’ (ABB). These poems are intriguing and narrate the world around Plath. As her poetry is often
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The Places You’ll Go I think Dr.Seuss said it best when he said “The more you read‚ the more things you will know‚ the more that you learn‚ the more places you’ll go.” My introduction to literature started as many other childrens’ did. My day would begin with an enthusiastic high pitched red muppet‚ otherwise known as Elmo‚ teaching me the ABC’s and end shortly after sunset with my mother reading me fairy tales about princesses and talking animals. By nightfall‚ the princess always ended up with
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The Bell Jar as a Controlling Image in The Bell Jar Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar contains a constant reference to a bell jar that acts as a controlling image. The bell jar in the novel controls the novel in three ways. It acts as a symbol for the depression that Esther Greenwood‚ the central character‚ experiences. It also serves as a metaphor for her. Finally‚ it is the very illusion that drives her into depression. Esther Greenwood works for a fashion magazine in New York and lives a "dream
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