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Adam & Eva’s Presentation

Adam & Eva’s Presentation

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Adam & Eva’s Presentation . Poem A – Invasion by Choman Hardi . Poem B – Parade’s End by Daljit Nagra. Invasion. The poem is read by an unknown speaker to an unknown listener - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Adam & Eva’s Presentation

Adam & Eva’s Presentation

Page 2: Adam & Eva’s Presentation

OPoem A – Invasion by Choman Hardi.

OPoem B – Parade’s End by Daljit Nagra

Page 3: Adam & Eva’s Presentation

O The poem is read by an unknown speaker to an unknown listener

O The speaker does not refer to themself directly, instead focusing upon the ominous 'them' in the first half of the poem, and the inclusive 'we' in the second half.

O Pretty simple meaning and there’s no implicit suggestions.

Invasion

Page 4: Adam & Eva’s Presentation

Parade’s EndO The poem is very implicit, and most

of the raw meaning is hidden, not obvious.

O The car is a symbol for the family for their aspirations in life and potentially the area as a whole.

Page 5: Adam & Eva’s Presentation

ExposureO The men appear to be trapped in a

No Mans land between life and death.

O The poem has a ‘circular’ structure. When It ends, they are exactly where they were in the first verse.

O The poem gives a worm’s eye view of the frontline based on Owen’s experiences in the war.

Page 6: Adam & Eva’s Presentation

Similarities(A-B)O They all Belong to a similar theme of

depression and shattered dreamsO Both finish bad, not a happy ending.

One’s doomed to failure and the other is about immigrants , not fitting in.

O The title ‘parade’s end’ relates to invasion in the sense that, a parade is normally formal and organized march. This is similar to the military theme that is present in ‘invasion’

Page 7: Adam & Eva’s Presentation

Differences(A-B)O ‘Parade’s end’ is about racism, about

the outsiders trying to fit into the community.

O It has constant references back to their skin colour and how desperately they want to belong.

O It is very implicit compared to ‘invasion’. The meaning is much more hidden

O ‘invasion’ forms a negative outcome from the start. Very pessimistic throughout.

Page 8: Adam & Eva’s Presentation

StructureO Both are short poems that are

separated by stanzas and use form devices to link the,.

O ‘Invasion’ uses short sentences in its stanzas which links to them not having much time.

Page 9: Adam & Eva’s Presentation

LanguageO ‘Parade’s end’ the poet uses the symbol of

the car to represent conflict in subtle clever ways. For example the champagne gold car, which automatically triggers images of wealth in your mind, ironically.

O Also, ‘parade’s end’ is much more poetic in the sense that the meaning is much more implicit, you have to dig deep to find it. In ‘invasion’ the meaning is explicitly in front of you, much more obvious.

Page 10: Adam & Eva’s Presentation

MeaningO Both poems have a completely

different meaning explicitly. Invasion is about war and parade’s end is about belonging. However, implicitly they are very similar, both are about sorrow and misery and shattered aspirations.

Page 11: Adam & Eva’s Presentation

ImageryO Both are descriptive, and use

adjectives and metaphors to help get a clear image of where the poem sets, and the context. Parade’s end is more subtle about it. Invasion uses a more eerie set of linguistic devices.

Page 12: Adam & Eva’s Presentation

EffectsO Both poem seem like their fate is

determined by the very first stanza and is confirmed at the end by the last one.

O Invasion they are doomed from the very start, the war will happen despite anything they do.

O Parade’s end you know that immigrants stand out of the usual English crowd and will never be 100% accepted by some of them.

Page 13: Adam & Eva’s Presentation

ThemeO As we are aware, all the poems

relate to the same theme, in this collection ‘clashes and collisions’. All the poems are about conflict and how people deal with those situations. Their misery is always unrelated for example war and invasion and acceptance in parade’s end. On an implicit level, in the end they both tie together, ending in misery and shattered dreams.