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    Adrienne Rich

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    The Poetry of Adrienne Rich Adrienne Rich was born in Baltimore‚ Maryland in the year of 1929. Rich grew up in a household as she describes it as " …white‚ middle-class‚ full of books‚ and with a father who encouraged her to write" (Daniel). Her father Arnold Rich was a doctor and a pathology professor and her mother‚ Helen Jones Rich ‚ was a pianist and a composer. "Adrienne Rich recalls her growing-up years clearly dominated by the intellectual presence and demands of the male in the family

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    The Appeal Of Adrienne Rich’s Poetry The poems of Adrienne Rich spoke to me in a powerful way. She was definitely one of the most original and thought provoking poets on my course. The poems that I have studied represent many of the new ideas that emerged during her life. Not only do I find these ideas interesting‚ but I believe that I have benefited directly from them. Her feminist outlook on life is evident in every one of her poems. The poems i have studied include; Living in Sin‚ Aunt Jennifer’s

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    Poems by Adrienne Rich

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    Conflict can be internal or external‚ as exemplified in “Diving into the Wreck” and “Storm Warnings”. Conflict is the common theme between these two poems. Both of these poems were written by Adrienne Rich. Rich was an American poet and she was also a feminist. She wrote “Diving into the Wreck” during time period where women were still viewed as house wives. Even though some women had jobs‚ they were not giving the same benefits as male coworkers. The external conflict is between the women and the

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    Pieces of Adrienne Rich: She lived throughout her poems and changed her writing to express herself. Adrienne Rich is a writer that decides that she doesn’t want to be another victim of the stereotype that is put on women (of her time.) In her writing days‚ the only method used to write was the "man’s" method. Though in the beginning of her career she wrote in that style‚ she changed her method of writing to feminism for her third book. She took an opposite direction to the writing style‚ and did

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    Adrienne Rich is a writer who has written several papers and poetries. For example‚ she wrote "The Necessities of Life" in 1966‚ "The Will to Change" in 1971‚ and "Leaflets" in 1969. Therefore‚ one event that Rich performed is a speech that was at a Douglass College convocation and which was printed in 1977 called "Claiming an Education". (Rich‚ pg. 608) The essay "Claiming an Education" is about how it is important for college students to claim an education and the reason we should have the education

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    Themes of Adrienne Rich Adrienne Rich’s poetry changed for many reasons after 1955. It’s difficult to pick just one‚ but it can be combined into one phrase; "her environment." Life started to change for Rich and women in general around that time. Her poetry serves as a corner stone for these changes. Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers‚ and Living in Sin are the two poems the anthology lists as being written before or during 1955. Aunt Jennifer doesn’t appear to be written about herself‚ but Sin does

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    Adrienne Rich on power in society Introduction The theme that interested me most in the poems by Adrienne Rich was the inadequacy of language as a means of communication. Rich shows that the reason for this lies in the way language expresses power relationships in society. Often this means the unequal relationship between women and men‚ but also between the powerful and the powerless. This theme is touched upon in almost every poem we studied‚ from Rich’s early poems to those written later. To

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    Warning” is written in chronological order to describe an oncoming storm. The speaker of the poem to be aware of the approaching storm and is taking safety precautions to protect themselves. However the storm reveals a much more deeper meaning. Adrienne Rich uses both literal and metaphorical meaning to compare the storm to the emotions of an individual. The poet’s tone presents a gloomy‚ melancholy tone so readers get the general atmosphere of the storm. In the first stanza‚ readers are aware of

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    Adrienne Rich’s “Diving into the Wreck” sends one into a deep cultural descent. We look a one ones exploration into the rift in society between sexes‚ and the journey to rewrite that. The three parts that symbolize this are: the book of myths‚ the camera and the knife‚ the diver’s relationship with the wreck and the cargo found below. The journey starts on a boat; the diver is alone and there not by choice but the need. The dive feels an obligation to free women from these myths‚ to “…heal the

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    collection of poems‚ is typical of her early work‚ illustrating the modest poetic ambitions for which she was praised by Auden. Technically‚ the work displays flawless craftsmanship‚ with a carefully regulated meter and rhyming couplets. Only later did Rich recognize how formalism functioned as she writes‚ "asbestos gloves‚" enabling her to grasp potentially dangerous materials without putting herself at risk‚ as in this poem. The formalism of "Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers" hides the more disturbing aspects

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