Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Casehistory:
Alison (head
injury)
- FORM AND STRUCTURE
- poem alternates
between first person
narrative and Alison
describing herself in
third person
- Enjambment
makes Alison's
memories seem
disjointed
- stanzas are often
broken linked
through
enjambment
Anmerkungen:
- ENJAMBMENT: continuation of a sentence or clause over a line break
- A dramatic monologue
- Begins and ends
with isolated lines
- Highlights Alison's
dislocation from her
past
- Emphasis of the
separation of the 2 selves
and has a disorientating
effect on reader
- STORY
- A young woman
is looking at a
photo of herself
- She is remembering her former life
before she suffered a head injury
and lost her memory
- She talks about how
different her life was
before
- As if she's another person now
- Has to remind
herself everyday
that her father is
dead
- she feels sorry for
her former self
whose end is soon
to come
- LANGUAGE
- contrast
- Suffered lots of physical
change but also mental
damage
- Stark contrast between
past Alison who's full of
hope and her present
self
- Pronouns
- refers to her former self as "SHE"
- Only uses "I" to talk
about the present
- She's disconnected
from her former self
- Language of injury
- She constantly reminds us
of her injury
- Becomes defining
feature of who she is
- Lots of images of brokenness and
injury
- MY IDEAS
- The first line is a stage
direction making her seem
more distant to readers as if
they are just watching over
her life
- Caesura and enjambment in the poem give
the effect that her thoughts are jumbled and
she is not able to continuously speak about
her past as she cannot remember what
happened
- It also gives the poem a smoother flow as if it was
being spoken
- The last line uses the word "was" which is a past participle
- this gives the effect that her hopes and dreams of
the past are all lost as she s no longer that girl
she speaks of
- Identity seems to get lost
throughout the poem as the
girl talks about herself as if
she has 2 different
identities
- current self and former self
- FEELINGS AND ATTITUDES
- Confusion
- frequently mentions that her
memory loss causes
confusion
- Grief
- Central stanza about her
father highlights her grief
- Has to be reminded of his death every day
- will never get over it
- Unable to mourn her father's
death because of her brain
damage
- Despite brain damage she is still
consumed by her sadness
- Loss
- Talks about what she's
lost since the accident
- thinks like a healthy body
- the ability to remember things
- past achievements
by her former self
- hopes and dreams she once
had are also lost