dawes act essay

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    Journey is an act of travelling from one place to another which can be seeking permanent home in a different country or travelling in the same country. It can affect different people in many different ways as they get emotional, intellectual and imaginative experiences individually in their life. All of these have been explored in some of Bruce Dawe’s meaningful poems ‘migrants’ and ‘drifters’ and a related text ‘Still Life’ which is a short film by Martin Sharpe. The poem ‘migrants’ was about group

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    As Knocking’ by an ex-Vietnam veteran Bruce Dawe was published in 1959 and can be found in his Sometimes Gladness: Collected Poems 1954-1992. ‘Enter Without So Much As Knocking’ shows how consumerism has a negative effect on society. The poem portrays the life of a typical man who is living in the suburbs. It begins with the birth of a child. As the baby begins to observe the world he has been brought into, he sees instructions, signs and expectation. Dawe stresses the point of the first thing that

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    dehumanisation of the soldiers. The poem was written in 1970 while Dawe was part of the RAAF. Bruce Dawe uses a variation of language and poetic features to express his opinion and point of view of the Vietnam War. All of the features which Dawe uses contribute to his representation of Australia during the war. ‘Weapons Training’ is a monologue about the harsh and dehumanising conditions of the training session for the soldiers. During the poem, Dawe uses a variety of crude words, insults and Australian slang

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    Bruce Dawe Metaphors

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    It is evident through both poems that Dawe believes the events in these poems are an injustice and he disagrees with these events; this is heard through the melancholic, sad tone that is apparent in both poems. He uses this sad tone to persuade the reader to disagree with what has happened

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    Bruce Dawe Poetry

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    Bruce Dawe Poetry- Many of Bruce Dawe’s poems have a heavy message and a bleak meaning relating to society’s weaknesses and downfalls. “Enter without so much as knocking” is a poem that is critical of consumerism in the modern world. The poem itself is a story of one man’s life, from birth till death and is a satirical look at modern society and its materialism. The poem begins with the Latin line “Memento, homo, qui, pulvis es, et in pulverem reverteris.” This means in English “Remember you are

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    Alienation - Essay

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    normlessness – lack of social norms, cultural estrangement and social isolation. In the three chosen texts; “Enter Without So Much As Knocking” by Bruce Dawe, “Capitalism and Alienation” by Danielle Pioli and “ Be My Brother” by Geneueve Clay, alienation is forced upon the characters by external forces. In the poem “Enter Without So Much As Knocking” by Bruce Dawe, the alienation

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    Belonging is defined as the feeling of security and support when there is a sense of understanding, inclusion and identity to a member trying to fit into a certain group and place. It is a perception of acceptance. The short film by Mark Osborne, More, was released in 1998. The short film features a scrawny gray creature in it’s everyday working life. He is unhappy but gains the strength to keep going by his childhood memories. He works hard to invent a the machine that changes everyone’s dull and

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    Bruce Dawe Analysis

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    people are treated? How many times do we feel stressed and stretched by the insane demands of the modern world (and what it expects of us).Ladies and gentlemen these questions can be confronted through the poetry of mid 19th century Australian Bruce Dawe as the concepts he explores sare universal relating to a wide audience throughout all time hence appealing to our contemporary audience today. Dawe’s poems “Enter so much without as knocking” and “Homecoming” explores the ideas of the bustle and

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    Paul Revere's Ride

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    to “The Other Riders.” There were two other riders: Samuel Prescott and William Dawes. They both played very important roles in alerting Boston of the impending attacks that were about to take place. The poem, Paul Revere’s Ride, by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow shows a clear bias statement towards Paul Revere. Longfellow states “..he came to the bridge in Concord town.” However, in “The Other Riders” it says, “...Dawes and Revere set out for Concord together, joined by Dr. Samuel Prescott” and “It

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    Bruce Dawe wrote many poems. In three of his poems—Enter Without So Much as Knocking; Americanized; and Breakthrough—he used techniques such as language, juxtaposition and metaphors to express his views about the negative effects of consumerism, American influence and technology. In the poem ‘Enter Without So Much as Knocking’, Bruce Dawe uses the language of television to display the effect technology and advertisements had on daily Australian life in the 1950’s. In the first stanza, Dawe wrote

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