Poetry By Knight And Groddeck Essay

PAGES
2
WORDS
679
Cite

Poetry by Knight and Groddeck There are facets of Etheridge Knight's poem, "A Wasp Woman Visits a Black Junkie in Prison" that both participate in a dying tradition as posited by Groddeck and which also attest to a variation of the notion of democracy -- which is far from ideal. In that respect, one can successfully defend the notion that this work of the author actually embraces more of the former concept than the latter. An examination of the language, its connotations, and the events that take place in the poem readily attest to this fact.

One of the aspects of this poem that is most enjoyable to the reader is the fact that it is highly realistic in its depiction of the conventional relations between African-Americans and Anglo-Saxons, particularly during the fiery time period in which the poet was composing this and other works that deal with a similar theme. The poet alludes to the fact that as an African-American drug abuser, there is very little in common that the protagonist could have with such a White Anglo...

...

The following quotation sufficiently demonstrates this fact. "After the seating / And the greeting, they fished for a denominator,/Common or uncommon;/And could only summon up the fact that both were human" (Knight). This quotation underscores the fact that there is essentially nothing in common between this pair, largely due to their racial distinctions. Quite often, criminal African-American junkies have been depicted in American society as the exact opposite of prim and proper Caucasian women, and this quotation alludes to this fact. As such, they have nothing in common except for a trite conversation about the children of the woman. The uselessness of such a superficial conversation adds to the realism depicted to the relationship between the pair, as the following quotation proves. "She offered no pills / To cure his many ills, no compact sermons/but…small talk" (Knight). Such a quotation demonstrates the fact that the woman does not help the junkie by giving him drugs or religious advice,…

Sources Used in Documents:

Works Cited

Knight, Etheridge. "A Wasp Woman Visits A Black Junkie in Prison." www.poetryfoundation.org. 1986. Web. http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/181863


Cite this Document:

"Poetry By Knight And Groddeck" (2013, February 08) Retrieved April 25, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/poetry-by-knight-and-groddeck-85779

"Poetry By Knight And Groddeck" 08 February 2013. Web.25 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/poetry-by-knight-and-groddeck-85779>

"Poetry By Knight And Groddeck", 08 February 2013, Accessed.25 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/poetry-by-knight-and-groddeck-85779

Related Documents
Poet Ethridge Knight
PAGES 2 WORDS 423

Etheridge Knight is effectively explained as an example of Whitman calls and egalitarian poem. At the same time, the analysis acknowledges that Knight finds himself forced to use language which some people would find offensive or even inappropriate. Rather than an unintentional slipping into common vernacular, this author explains that Knight's usage of profanity is an intentional commentary on the marginalization experienced by people in minority groups. The fact

Ethridge Knight
PAGES 1 WORDS 333

Post and Other Thoughts I also believe Knight's poetry is an early expression of the uneven surface of the ethnic world he lived in. The heartfelt loss and anguish of "Feeling Fucked Up" are universal emotions experienced by many at the loss of love. However, the anger directed at Coltrane, Marx, Fidel, Mao, democracy, communism, smack, pot, and red stripped tomatoes, God, Mary and Jesus can only be hurled by

artist must take a stance in the world. He or she must present himself from a vantage point, a perspective, that identifies him or herself and from which he is able to convey his or her sentiments about whatever topic is at hand. This sense of identity and the vantage point it affords Lucille Clifton and Etheridge Knight are fairly obvious in their poems "adam thinking" and "The Violent