Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Compare how poets present the effects
in "war photographer"and one other
poem
- Memory and how the effects of war haunt the speakers
- War photographer
- "stanger's features faintly start to twist"
- Look of pain on the man's face
- Doesn't know who the person was
- "faintly" can refer to the photo
processing but also the man's
death coming back to his mind
- "half-formed ghost"
- The person was dying when the
photograph was being taken and the
photographer couldn't help him
- The event haunts him
- He is haunted by specific memories
- Remains
- Present tense showing he the memory continues to haunt him
- "blood-shadow stays on the street"
- Visual reminder of the death foreshadowing that it will haunt him
- "But I blink/and he bursts
again through the doors of
the bank"
- Enjambment after "blink" carries you to the next stanza where
there is still horror
- The past event is still affecting him now
- Difference
- In remains the poet highlights the psychological effects of war that people or the world do not understand
- In war photographer the poet implies their frustration with the ignorance and apathy of society
- Guilt
- War photographer
- The photographer is stuggling to
readjust to home
- "his hands, which did not tremble then
- He is calm in the face of horrors but now they affect him
- There is a contrast of "then" and "now"
- His guilt is worse once the speaker returns home
- "Home again to ordinary pain"
- There is injustice of what the photographer is seeing
- Remains
- Starts with the pronoun "we" but changes to
first person "I" sounding like a confession
- Repition of "all" at the start - "all
three of us open fire"
- "his life in my bloody hands"
- No collective responsibility at the end, the speaker feels completely responsible.
- "bloody" refers to the mans blood but also the soldiers anger with himself