Q1. How does the grandmother’s world differ from the speaker's at school? What details especially reveal those differences?The poem “Snapping Beans” by Lisa Parker draws a distinct contrast between the world of the speaker’s grandmother and her life in school. The poem focuses on a very physical image, that of the speaker helping her grandmother snap beans into a silver bowl after she has come home to her southern, childhood home after going to school in the North. Her grandmother’s world is focused on faith and a very uncritical form of Christianity, as can be seen in her grandmother’s humming “What A Friend We Have In Jesus.”
In contrast, the speaker when she is going to school, lives in a very cerebral world of books where everything is questioned, including religion. Her fellow students, sporting nose rings, are said to write poems about Buddhism, sex, and alcohol. Presumably the last two are forbidden by the grandmother’s faith, and Buddhism is entirely foreign to the grandmother. The speaker also notes that she has read, “revelations by book and lecture/as real as any shout of faith, / potent as a swig of strychnine.” The poet’s choice of language with religious resonance is very deliberate here, given that the speaker’s insights into the human condition are ultimately secular in nature. There is...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now