Verified Document

Anne Sexton's "Her Kind" The Essay

Related Topics:

¶ … Anne Sexton's "Her Kind"

The syntax of this poem, with the constant repetition of "I" at the beginning of each clause, affects the tone of the poem by making it sound almost like a chant, or a call to action. It also has the affect of forcing identification with the elements of the poem; the speaker's repeated use of "I" before listing several objects, events, and actions has the effect of connecting the reader to these elements, as well. The syntax continues to follow a pattern after each use of "I," listing first another identifying noun clause before the verb clause, making the figure of the speaker stronger than the details of the poem.

The diction of the poem is also a highly contributive factor of the tone. In the first stanza, words like "possessed" and "haunting" create a sense of spookiness that also portrays the continuing and eternal aspect of womanhood that Sexton explores in the poem. The second stanza makes a great use of sibilance with repeated "s's in the words "skillets," "Shelves," "silks," and "suppers," again playing with the idea of evil as the repeated "s's form a hiss like that of a serpent. Throughout the poem, the use of past tense active verbs places the poem in a strange sort of disconnected yet impassioned context, reinforcing the idea that the poem is a chant of sorts. This is most apparent, of course, in the repeated "I have been her kind."

There is perhaps no element in the poem that contributes to the tone more than the imagery. This changes significantly from stanza to stanza, and so is also the main organizational criteria of the poem. The imagery moves from spooky and evil in the first stanza to a more benign and warm but still secretive magic in the second, with pictures of "worms and elves," and resolves in the open light of a cart ride in the third stanza, revealing woman finally in her martyred freedom.

Cite this Document:
Copy Bibliography Citation

Related Documents

Anne Sexton and Alfred Hitchcock Briar Rose
Words: 1625 Length: 5 Document Type: Term Paper

Anne Sexton and Alfred Hitchcock Briar Rose and Blood in the Shower Introduction to Both Texts Sexton's Sleeping Beauty goes from an initial anti-feminist slumber of childhood but grows to a later, mature feminist awakening. Hitchcock's Marion Crane goes from an initial feminist empowerment and sexual awakening to anti-feminist slumber and death as the film "Psycho" is more interested in the masculine conflict and journey of the self. Both "Briar Rose: Sleeping Beauty" by

Abortion, Anne Sexton Repeats the
Words: 658 Length: 2 Document Type: Reaction Paper

.. / he took the fullness that love began." Using the term Rumplestiltskin invokes the fairy tale, which further allows the narrator to distance herself from the abortion. A fairy tale suggests being out of touch with reality. This corresponds with the sense of abortions being the type of "logic" that "will lead / to loss without death." The narrator also trivializes her role by saying, "I changed my shoes,

Curse Against Elegies Beginning With
Words: 1337 Length: 4 Document Type: Essay

The imagery is very clear and stark; the objects and people she recalls in this stanza are not pleasant or beautiful, much of it is ugly and disgusting, such as a worm that lived in a cat's ear, presumably ringworm, or some other type of disease. Perhaps, she is comparing love to all of these awful, drab things. In the places we could find love, such as in the everyday

Theatricality in Dreiser's Sister Carrie and Wharton's the House...
Words: 2818 Length: 10 Document Type: Term Paper

Gender as Performance Theodore Dreiser's 1900 novel Sister Carrie is in style and tone in many ways radically different from Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth, published just five years later. And yet there is in both works a similar core, what might be called a parallel moral, for both novels explore the ways in which gender is performative in the two societies that we learn about within the world of

Cinderella / Transformation Stories Variants on the
Words: 1251 Length: 4 Document Type: Essay

Cinderella / Transformation Stories Variants on the "Cinderella" Story The Cinderella story is one that is much loved throughout the world; more than seven hundred versions exist. Many of these versions have been told for centuries. The story has universal appeal because of specific elements that are part of human nature. It is a story in which good triumphs over evil. It is a story that shows that dreams really can come

Hearing Voices, Patients/Therapists in an
Words: 4695 Length: 15 Document Type: Term Paper

Jung and auditory hallucinations Meyer (2003), in a discussion of Jungian symbolism in the movie, Spider-Man, notes that both masks and voices are essential to the movement of heroic characters through the plotline. Meyer is not, however, a psychologist, nor even an anthropologist; rather, she is a write about communications. Still, her work on Spider-Man tied several of the movie's themes to Jungian thought. Halifax's work goes farther in bringing Jungian thought

Sign Up for Unlimited Study Help

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