"Gwen harwood textual integrity" Essays and Research Papers

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    DIstinctive Voices Essay

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    underlying place in the society. Both John F. Kennedy and Severn Cullis Suzuki provide evidence of this which is evident in the use of contrast‚ anaphora‚ imagery‚ rhetorical questions and allusion but is also perpetuated in The Sharpness of Death by Gwen Harwood. These texts provide understanding and connections within eachother…….. Distinctive Voices engage with the audience to create an understanding with people about current events. The Address to the Plenary Session‚ Earth summit speech spoken by

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    Home of Mercy

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    Mercy Home of Mercy is a sonnet written by Gwen Harwood during modern era Australia. It depicts the lifestyle of a select few group of “ruined girls”‚ who have been impregnated and exiled to live with the nuns throughout the course of their pregnancy‚ in hope of exoneration. It deals with the confronting issue of the loss youthful innocence; is a wrong decision made in your teenage years really enough to have the rest of your social life destroyed? Gwen Harwood’s poem raises the problem of teenage

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    Constant” Explore how this quote relates to 2 of Gwen Harwood’s Poems‚ along with 2 pieces of related material. Change itself is the only constant in life‚ whether we are looking for it or doing everything in our power to avoid it‚ it always finds a way to strike. Change comes in different forms‚ some good‚ some bad‚ some caused internally‚ others externally‚ we can never know how it will hit us‚ all we can know is that it will. When looking into Gwen Harwoods poetry we see a lot of different ideas and

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    english study guide

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    through life‚ we come to know ourselves and the world around us. This occurs through our interctions with others and experiences‚ and exploration of self. 20th century Australian modern port‚ Gwen Harwood was interested in ways in which we come to know ourselves and develop throughout our lives. Gwen Harwood shows concerns important to human experience including life‚ death‚ spirituality‚ the journey towards self-knowledge‚ the innocence and vulnerability of childhood‚ which is explored through childhood

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    their understanding of a text. Intertextuality involves recognising similarities between texts and then using your understanding developed from the previous text to develop a reading for sequential texts. “Burning Sappho” and “Prize Giving” by Gwen Harwood‚ The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood and Macbeth by William Shakespeare‚ have all been constructed to explore gender roles within society. It is this similarity between these texts that allowed me to apply intertextuality as a reading strategy

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    and mortality. Discuss this statement in light of your understanding of the poetry of Gwen Harwood. Gwen Harwood’s mournful laments Mother Who Gave Me Life and Father and Child explore the challenging ideas of nostalgia and mortality to provide valued texts. Harwood’s elegy Mother Who Gave Me Life nostalgically explores the confronting concepts of the unavoidability of death and past bleak memories. Harwood explains explores the fragility e nature of life through the fabric motif symbolism;

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    Texts for Belonging

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    Murray Australia 1970 by Judith Wright Brothers and Sisters by Judith Wright Class of 1927 by Gwen Harwood Clearances by Seamus Heaney Colour Bar by Oodgeroo Noonuccal Couples by Kate Jennings Drifters by Bruce Dawe Father and Child by Gwen Harwood Kindness by Sylvia Plath Letting Go - Fay Zwicky Mother-Right by Adrienne Rich Refugee Blues by W. H. Auden. Sunburban Sonnet by Gwen Harwood The Applicant by Sylvia Plath The Conquest by les Murray The Late Ferry by Robert Gray The Mending

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    In the Park

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    Essay on “In the park “ In the park by Gwen Harwood is a poem that expresses the feelings associated with being a mother and feeling disconnected from the outside world‚ an issue that rarely discussed by women. This poem mainly represents the idea of changing identity because of circumstance. The woman in the poem is being destroyed by the birth of her three children. ‘Her clothes are out of date’ uses present tense to describe how she is no longer a lively‚ interesting woman. She has changed to

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    Sgee

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    Analyse the ways Gwen Harwood has prompted you to understand and respond to great and provocative ideas in her poetry. Make detailed reference to 3 poems. Gwen Harwood’s body of work skilfully portrays provocative ideas which stimulate understanding and engage with readers. Harwood’s poems ‘The Violets’‚ ‘Sharpness of Death’ and ‘Father and Child’ are key ideas which are representative of the transition from innocence to experience‚ the transience of time and the inevitability of death. Due to

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    The Glass Jar Analysis

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    Discoveries deepen our understandings of ourselves and the world and have a transformative effect on those who discover. In William Shakespeare’s play The Tempest‚ and Gwen Harwood’s poem ‘The Glass Jar’‚ the authors use the characterisation of main characters in their texts to explore the ways in which discovery affects people and how it changes their perspectives‚ leading to deeper and broader understandings of themselves and their worlds. The characters of the boy in ‘The Glass Jar’ and Miranda

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