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Eliot’s poetic technique in “Love Song”
In what ways does Eliot’s poetic technique in “Love Song” reflect Modernist poetry? What characteristics of Modernism in general do you find in this poem?
Is Frost’s “Mending Wall” as Modern as Eliot’s “Love Song”? Explain. For example, are the Frost poems less fragmented or easier to follow than Eliot's poem? Are they written in stream of consciousness? What other characteristics of Modernism do you find embedded or missing in Frost’s poems?
What advantage/disadvantage does Fitzgerald gain by using the third-person narrator in Winter Dreams,” rather than having Dexter tell the story in first person? In what ways is this
narrative technique similar/different to that used by Faulkner in “A Rose for Emily”?
Consider how and why Emily tries to control time and circumstance in “A Rose for Emily.” How does she resist change and why? Does Homer represent change? Consider his job.
Consider important symbols in the story, such as her watch. What do these say about her as a character? How has her life been influenced by certain actions and opinions of her father?
Some critics have pointed out that Hurston, as a folklorist, is re-rewriting the Garden of Eden story in “Sweat,” but from a feminist point of view. Do you agree? Why would she do
this? What is her purpose? If order is restored at the story's end, how does that differ from the biblical version?
Langston Hughes’s “Harlem” critiques the American Dream, revealing this idea as an illusion for many in America. Why does Hughes do this in the poem and what techniques does he employ to get his message across? Also, why is it significant that Harlem is not mentioned in the poem? This poem was written many years after the Harlem Renaissance ended; why is this important to understanding the poem?
Like Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper” and Faulkner’s “A Rose for Emily,” “Dare's Gift” is a Gothic story with images of female entrapment. Why would a modern writer like Glasgow