heat23
Elite Member
Due to complications I am delaying the writing on the poem "Daddy."
I know you people are disappointed, but I've got something alot more exciting!!!
A NEW ESSAY!!
Fear not, I have already written it and would just some opinions 🙂
- "Write an essay comparing the depictions of warfare in Randall Jarrell's "The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner" and Robert Lowell's "For the Union Dead"
Just to let you know, I am not happy with what I wrote, but I find it very difficult for me to make it any better 🙁
Presenting......the essay.......
In ?The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner? and ?For the Union Dead?, warfare is depicted as inglorious and dehumanizing. In ?The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner?, the narrator reveals that he involuntarily went from the comfort and warmth of his mother?s womb, to the harsh and cold ?womb? of the airplane in which he is a gunner. After being brutally killed by enemy fire, his mutilated body is then washed out with a hose so the next person can take his place. This vivid imagery shows that war is a machine, where one person can be replaced with the next with total indifference. Human life is devalued to a degree that soldiers are treated merely as puppets as opposed to brave men that are fighting for their country. While ?For the Union Dead? is not nearly as gruesome, it still depicts war as dishonorable and forgettable. Even though a memorial has been built to remember soldiers, it is quickly being forgotten due to commercialism. A parking garage, which is physically endangering the memorial, shows no concern and that the meaning of the monument has been lost. The advertisements exploiting the bombing of Hiroshima shows that even a recent war can be quickly forgotten. These are forcing the monument to ?grow slimmer and younger each year (Lowell p.2371).? As time passes, not only is the memorial physically decaying, but is also fading away from memory as modernization displaces the past. Even though each poem is told from a different perspective, one from the point of view of a gunner in battle, and another from an observer of a Civil War memorial, society?s indifference towards our fallen heroes show war as inhumane and inglorious.
Be as harsh as possible
I know you people are disappointed, but I've got something alot more exciting!!!
A NEW ESSAY!!
Fear not, I have already written it and would just some opinions 🙂
- "Write an essay comparing the depictions of warfare in Randall Jarrell's "The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner" and Robert Lowell's "For the Union Dead"
Just to let you know, I am not happy with what I wrote, but I find it very difficult for me to make it any better 🙁
Presenting......the essay.......
In ?The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner? and ?For the Union Dead?, warfare is depicted as inglorious and dehumanizing. In ?The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner?, the narrator reveals that he involuntarily went from the comfort and warmth of his mother?s womb, to the harsh and cold ?womb? of the airplane in which he is a gunner. After being brutally killed by enemy fire, his mutilated body is then washed out with a hose so the next person can take his place. This vivid imagery shows that war is a machine, where one person can be replaced with the next with total indifference. Human life is devalued to a degree that soldiers are treated merely as puppets as opposed to brave men that are fighting for their country. While ?For the Union Dead? is not nearly as gruesome, it still depicts war as dishonorable and forgettable. Even though a memorial has been built to remember soldiers, it is quickly being forgotten due to commercialism. A parking garage, which is physically endangering the memorial, shows no concern and that the meaning of the monument has been lost. The advertisements exploiting the bombing of Hiroshima shows that even a recent war can be quickly forgotten. These are forcing the monument to ?grow slimmer and younger each year (Lowell p.2371).? As time passes, not only is the memorial physically decaying, but is also fading away from memory as modernization displaces the past. Even though each poem is told from a different perspective, one from the point of view of a gunner in battle, and another from an observer of a Civil War memorial, society?s indifference towards our fallen heroes show war as inhumane and inglorious.
Be as harsh as possible