Friday, February 8, 2019
Use of Photographs in This Is a Photograph of Me and Photograph, 1958 :: Photograph
Use of Photographs in This Is a Photograph of Me and Photograph, 1958 At first glance, This Is a Photograph of Me by Marg aret Atwood and Photograph, 1958 by Patricia Young are strikingly similar works in that both songs utilize the imagery of a pullulate as a communication device however, upon closer examination they differ markedly in the approach each poet takes in utilizing this same device. The similarities between these two metrical compositions are immediately obvious to the reader both poems are written by female poets, both poems have the poet as the speaker, both poems describe how the poet feels roughly herself, and both poems utilize the photograph as a device to communicate their message to the reader. Less obvious, is the differing approaches taken by each poet. In the poem This Is a Photograph of Me by Margaret Atwood, the photograph is used by the poet as a device to directly communicate her message to the reader. The title of the poem announces in a direct and forthright way that the poem go out be a self examination. The poem begins with Atwood directly and literally describing the photograph itself It was taken some time ago. / At first it seems to be / a smeared / print blurred lines and grey flecks / blended with the paper. The poets use of words equal smeared, blurred and blended immediately and directly communicates to the reader that the poet feels unclear, directionless and without focus. afterwards this opening stanza, the poet begins to describe the contents of the photograph then as you crease / it, you see in the left-hand corner / a thing that is equivalent a branch part of a tree and to the right, halfway up / what ought to be a gentle / slope, a small frame house. Margaret Atwood is stepwise scoop uping the reader inward, from the outside edge of the photograph towards the core group of the photograph, the poem, and the poet herself. This throw out be seen clearly on the following lines I am in the lake, in the c enter / of the picture, just under the surface. The atmosphere created is one of introspection and self examination but if you look long enough, / eventually / you entrust be able to see me. Atwood is using the device of the photograph to draw the reader from the outside world inwards to her world in the center of the photograph.
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