Saturday, August 3, 2019
Critical Analysis of War Photographer by Carol Ann Duffy :: English Literature
Critical Analysis of War Photographer by Carol Ann Duffy    In his darkroom he is finally alone    with spools of suffering set out in ordered rows.    The only light is red and softly glows,    as though this were a church and he    a priest preparing to intone a Mass.    Belfast. Beirut. Phnom Penh. All flesh is grass.    He has a job to do. Solutions slop in trays    beneath his hands which did not tremble then    though seem to now. Rural England. Home again    to ordinary pain which simple weather can dispel,    to fields which don't explode beneath the feet    of running children in a nightmare heat.    Something is happening. A stranger's features    faintly start to twist before his eyes,    a half-formed ghost. He remembers the cries    of this man's wife, how he sought approval    without words to do what someone must    and how the blood stained into foreign dust.    A hundred agonies in black-and-white    From which his editor will pick out five or six    for Sunday's supplement. The reader's eyeballs prick    with tears between the bath and pre-lunch beers.    From the aeroplane he stares impassively where    he earns his living and they do not care.    Carol Ann Duffy was born in Glasgow in 1955. She grew up in  Staffordshire and went to university in Liverpool. Having spent some  time in London as a freelance writer, she now lives in Manchester. She  has won many prizes and several awards for her poetry. Her poems, she  says, 'come from my everyday experience, my past/memory and my  imagination. People and characters are fascinating to me'. Many of her  poems are based on true experiences and real people. In the 1970s  Carol Ann Duffy was friendly with Don McCullin, a famous photographer  whose photographs of war were widely published and respected. Her  poem, "War Photographer", (from Standing Female Nude, 1985), is based  on conversations she had with him.    The poem works on a very personal level - it is based on the authentic  experience of a war photographer - and on a much wider level, saying  something about the views and attitudes within our society concerning  things that happen much further away. People are glad to distance  themselves from the harsh realities of war whilst keeping themselves  informed of, and superficially sympathetic to these real life  situations.    The structure of this poem supports this dichotomy in that there are  two contrasting worlds: the world of war zones ("Belfast. Beirut.  Phnom Penh.") and the calmer world of "Rural England". The war  photographer is the man who goes between these two worlds. The safe  world of England is signified by the cliche of a typical Sunday: "The  bath and pre-lunch beers" while the horror of war is expressed through    					    
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