Relationships that change
- Created by: JCarver
- Created on: 10-06-15 09:17
View mindmap
- Relationships that change
- Pelagia and Correlli
- Young flirtatious couple - reader sympathise
- "infinitely enclosed in their first secret and unpatriotic kiss"
- "She was desperately trying not to smile"
- "Invaders should behave with me dignity"
- "Unselfconsciously in passing she kissed him on the other (cheek)" - Bodies willing them together
- "After the war I'll love you, after the war I'll love you forever"
- Unsatisfactory for the reader - their ship deteriorates after the war
- Pelagia is cynical old women, no loner young and playful but self-deprecating and disappointing
- "Just go away and leave me in peace"
- Not how their romantic love story should have ended; anti-climactic
- Pelagia is cynical old women, no loner young and playful but self-deprecating and disappointing
- Unsatisfactory for the reader - their ship deteriorates after the war
- Restricted by society; conquerer v conquered ideas
- Destructive society
- A04 italians = Axis power, Greeks = United Nations
- Separation
- Gatsby was away too long and so everything changed
- Destructive society
- Focus on materialism meant Gatsby had to prove himself by acquiring vast sums of money
- Correlli was away too long and so Cephalonia/Pelagia/their ship changed
- Gatsby was away too long and so everything changed
- Young flirtatious couple - reader sympathise
- Daisy and Gatsby
- Changed significantly since Louisville but Gatsby doesn't realise
- Gatsby is stuck in the past - symbolism of the clock; "I think we all believed it had smashed in pieces"
- Daisy is still the enchanting girl from Louisville
- But there is sinister undertones; "The voice was a deathless song" - temptress
- Gatsby was away too long and so everything changed
- Focus on materialism meant Gatsby had to prove himself by acquiring vast sums of money
- Focus on materialism meant Gatsby had to prove himself by acquiring vast sums of money
- Changed significantly since Louisville but Gatsby doesn't realise
- Unchanging relationships
- A Song by Carew
- Poem doesnt change
- Not realistic of life; less engaging
- Consistent with wholly aesthetic theme
- "Ask me no more where those stars light"
- Anaphoric "ask me no more" could suggest sense of denial
- "Ask me no more where those stars light"
- Worrying lack of female perspective
- R-ship is 1 dimensional and not as engaging as P&C or D&G
- Other r-ships are multi-faceted/complex/inrticate
- To His Mistress Going to Bed
- Worrying lack of female perspective
- R-ship doesnt change but increases in demand
- "Off with that girdle"
- To modern reader the lack of female perspective and male domination is unsettling
- "My America, my new found-land"
- R-ship is 1 dimensional and not as engaging as P&C or D&G
- Poem doesnt change
- A Song by Carew
- The Collar
- For majority of poem, speaker wants "double pleasures"
- "I struck the board and cried no more"
- Dramatically changes in final couplet when God speaks to him
- " I heard one calling 'Child' and I replied 'My Lord'"
- Engaging through powerful force of God and religion, reining speaker in
- Contrast to P&C who aren't as engaging after r-ship changes so much
- Engaging through powerful force of God and religion, reining speaker in
- " I heard one calling 'Child' and I replied 'My Lord'"
- Pelagia and Correlli
Similar English Literature resources:
Teacher recommended
Comments
No comments have yet been made