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Summary Poems of The Decade detailed analysis £6.06   Add to cart

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Summary Poems of The Decade detailed analysis

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A document compiled over 2 years with analysis in depth, with quotes and techniques for all 20 poems. Perfect for essay planning and comparisons.

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  • June 18, 2024
  • 25
  • 2023/2024
  • Summary
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elliebrooks05
Poems of the decade
Eat me – Patience Agbabi
‘Eat Me’ is a poem that explores the relationship between a ‘feeder’
(someone who takes pleasure from encouraging a partner’s weight gain)
and the narrator.
The poem takes a rigid structure, with tercets of similar length,
potentially mimicking a tiered cake, which likely represents the extreme
control and restriction the narrator is under due to her weight gain
becoming debilitating throughout the poem.
The poem also uses a significant amount of water imagery – using
metaphors suggesting the idea of exploration, desertion, and power.
 Use of tercets not couplets – not a healthy couple – imbalanced
power dynamic
 Connection with speaker – disconnect with partner
 Alice in wonderland allusion with ‘eat me’
 Use of plosive consonance
 Anaphora in seventh stanza
 Ten stanzas reflecting the narrator going from 30 to 40
 Female voice
 Half-rhymes/pararhymes - feeling of discomfort
 Semantic field of exploration, water and colonisation
 Enjambment – sense of building and growth
 Dramatic monologue
Key quotes
 ‘When I hit thirty’ - the use of an idiom suggests if she hit thirty
years of ages or thirty stone in weight - ‘hit’ comes across rather
violently, foreshadowing the oppressive nature of the relationship

,  ‘I did what I was told. Didn’t even taste it’ - suggests her initial
obedience to her partner, however stating she ‘didn’t’ ‘taste’ it
suggests she gains no pleasure from fulfilling her partner’s
commands
 ‘He asked me to get up and walk round the bed so he could watch’
- further adds to the uncomfortable undertone created in the poem,
as it creates the idea that the narrator is watched carefully by the
partner, in a controlling manner
 ‘The bigger the better’ - suggesting his pleasure in the control of
her weight, it becomes clear he aims to feed her until she loses her
own strength and sense of self-care
 This is furthered by ‘his pleasure, to watch me swell like forbidden
fruit’
 ‘Too fat to leave’ - explicitly presents the unfair power dynamic,
he strives to make her unable to leave him
 ‘Poured olive oil down my throat’ - furthering the violent imagery,
‘poured’ creates the idea that this act is forceful.
 ‘I drowned his dying sentence out.’ - end stopped line, suggesting
potential death. Also portrays a change in the power play of the
relationship, leaving the narrator as overcoming her partner
 ‘There was nothing left in the house to eat’ - ambiguous ending,
allows the reader to question if the narrator consumed her partner
as the ultimate act of empowerment. Also has a comical undertone
Chainsaw versus the Pampas Grass – Simon Armitage
A poem exploring the metaphorical battle between a chainsaw and
pampas grass – this could suggest either an allegory for humanity versus
nature or men versus women
 Lack of structure – irregular, suggesting an informal fight which is
unorganised and impulsive

,  Plosive consonance and fricatives
 Natural imagery versus mechanical imagery
Key quotes
 ‘Unlikely match’ - unfair fight - ‘match’ may suggest a couple
 ‘Grinding its teeth’ - personification of chainsaw
 ‘Knocked back a quarter-pint of engine oil’ - personification,
masculine
 ‘Weightless wreckage of wasps’ - death imagery, alliteration
 ‘it's bloody desire, its sweet tooth for the flesh of the face and the
bones underneath’ - fricatives, personification, violence
 ‘Ludicrous feathers’ - femininity, resentment, mocking, envious
 ‘Sledgehammer taken to crack the nut’ - inequality of
power/strength, overpowering
 ‘Plant juice spat from the pipes and tubes’ - violence, death, rape,
female genitalia are suggested with ‘tubes’
 ‘Blade became choked with soil or fouled with weeds’ - fight back,
not backing down
 ‘Like cutting at water or air with a knife’ - inequality, more power
play
 ‘The chainsaw seethed’ - personification, shifting blame onto the
chainsaw
 ‘Work back through its man-made dreams’ - man versus nature
 ‘The seamless urge to persist was as far as it got’ - defeat, failure
of brutality
Material – Ros Barber
Poem exploring an extended metaphor of loss. How the narrator mourns
their mother through the hanky.
 Time shifts

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