Sunday, May 31, 2020
Comparative Analysis of Ant Farm and Running Out of Choices - Literature Essay Samples
ââ¬Å"Ant Farmâ⬠and ââ¬Å"Running Out of Choicesâ⬠express two distinct ideas. The first is how experience, knowledge, and instinct can influence our actions or view of things. The second is that a life with restriction may be more satisfying than the burden of choice. When juxtaposed, the poems can work together to provide a fuller message. However, the poems deliver their messages differently. ââ¬Å"Running Out of Choicesâ⬠uses a series of events and memories in a traditional poetic structure, while ââ¬Å"Ant Farmâ⬠uses paradoxes and images in a structure resembling prose. Though the poemsââ¬â¢ styles are different, they share a few themes: religion, a fascination with cruelty, the female reproductive experience, insignificance of life, and a return to early memories. ââ¬Å"Running Out of Choicesâ⬠is more approachable than ââ¬Å"Ant Farmâ⬠. It is divided into stanzas of reasonable length, each investigating a distinct memory. The fir st stanza describes the speakerââ¬â¢s first impression of hearing news from foreign media. The second discusses how the speaker cannot mention another country without thinking about its involvement in the wars that have plagued history. The third is about how talk of Mississippi resurrects the story of Medgar Eversââ¬â¢ murder, and so on and so forth. In spite of its seeming space gaps, ââ¬Å"Ant Farmâ⬠is structured more like prose, containing a few dense stanzas. It contains unimpressive line breaks, whose sole purpose seems to be to categorize the poem as poetry rather than prose. The first stanza discusses the speakerââ¬â¢s recollection of drowning an ant hill, which ends with ââ¬Å"I didnââ¬â¢t know therââ¬â¢d be few/ [new stanza] survivors; I expected inâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ (T.H. p.21). Some may find that this line break does not add any value to the poem and may cause unnecessary confusion. Moreover, the text of the poem itself is very complex. Its difficulty is apparent in ââ¬Å"meatââ¬â¢s indigestible until the fontanels / seal fate.â⬠(T.H. p.21) compared to the more straightforward text in ââ¬Å"Running Out of Choicesâ⬠, ââ¬Å"I cannot even say Mississippi because someone might recall / that Medgar Evers was murdered there.â⬠(p. P.B. p.17). Though the poemsââ¬â¢ are aesthetically different, that does not necessarily make the messages of poem harder to juxtapose. However, the poemââ¬â¢s different approaches can make them seem disconnected. ââ¬Å"Running Out of Choicesâ⬠uses an extensive series of memories and events to provide substantial evidence and insight into the message of the poem. ââ¬Å"Ant Farmâ⬠analyzes ant life while using seemingly intangible images and paradoxes to spark thought in the reader. In ââ¬Å"Running Out of Choices,â⬠each stanza explores a location with which the speaker has an associated memory. When the speaker mentions ââ¬Å"Los Angeles, city of mercy, ci ty of angelsâ⬠, a disturbing memory associated with the location comes to mind: Marvin Gaye Sr. killing his son. Nearly all the stanzas follow this pattern. The plot of ââ¬Å"Ant Farmâ⬠begins with a story of the speaker drowning an ant hill and continues on to describe what life is like for the ants. The story of the ants is connected with human themes. When the speaker says ââ¬Å"trophallaxis keeps ants going, reciprocal feeding, exchange of chemical / stimulation, workers (wingless, infertile females denied or uninterested in sex) tend / the young, feeding them honeydew from raids on aphidsâ⬠(T.H. p.22), the feeding practices of ants are analogically connected with human themes of care and nourishment. But ââ¬Å"Ant Farmâ⬠also makes use of seemingly contradictory statements like ââ¬Å"stamina a backbone obfuscatesâ⬠, paradoxical images such as a monstrous view of a baby fetus and a flower, as well as erotic themes when the poem uses words like mate, stimulation, spike, tunnel, lips ,secrete, and pleasure. The poems have very different styles and approaches, but their contents are not entirely disconnected; some themes are mirrored in both poems. A few examples of the female reproductive experience exists in ââ¬Å"Ant Farmâ⬠, as the nourishment the worker ants give the young and the women in the park who have babies to nurse. In ââ¬Å"Running Out of Choicesâ⬠, the speaker recalls an abortion she had in New York and the nature of her mischievous child. Both poems make use of religious experiences. ââ¬Å"Ant Farmâ⬠refers to ââ¬Å"touching Godâ⬠and ââ¬Å"his miseryâ⬠, and ââ¬Å"Running Out of Choicesâ⬠describes ââ¬Å"Christians fed to lionsâ⬠and the traditional consumption of the blood and body of Jesus. There is also a universal fascination with cruelty in both poems as ââ¬Å"Running Out of Choicesâ⬠refers to rape, death, and dishonesty, while ââ¬Å"Ant Farmâ⬠is gri tty enough to describe an ant infected with a fungus exploding into spores. In both poems, the speaker returns to her early memories in a cyclical manner. In Ant Farmâ⬠, it is the eventual annihilation of the ants, a childhood memory, in the beginning by scalding water, and at the end, by becoming liquefied. In Running Out of Choices, it is the constant returning home; not physically, but the home as a living presence in the mind of the speaker. ââ¬Å"Where can I go without somehow returning to Cleveland? (P.B. p.19). It may be inferred that the speakerââ¬â¢s present unquiet and confused life mirrors her past life in the projects. Moreover, the lives of those residing in the Cleveland projects may resemble, at least at an unconscious level, the expendable lives of the ants. Neither is ultimately meant to escape. This expendability sadly comments on the insignificance of life; in both poems the speaker speaks naturally of death with little regret. People and ants die horribl e deaths and that is just the way it goes. The use of these similar themes in both pieces makes the poemsââ¬â¢ content more comparable and help makes their possible combined message more plausible and connected. These poems work in a way as two jigsaw puzzle pieces. Each one has its own message that includes some ideas from the other, and together they provide a fuller picture. ââ¬Å"Running Out of Choicesâ⬠expresses how our experiences and knowledge cause us to ââ¬Å"run out of choicesâ⬠in the way we perceive reality. For example, the speaker describes how she cannot think of ââ¬Å"mocha-colored makeupâ⬠except ââ¬Å"in summer when white people want tans more than they donââ¬â¢t want to be blackâ⬠. ââ¬Å"Ant Farmâ⬠focuses on the predetermined life of ants and that even though they live without choice, their life can be very satisfying. While the burdens of choice and freedom are heavy for humans, ââ¬Å"busy ants are neither saved nor uns aved nor concerned.â⬠(T.H. p.22). ââ¬Å"Running Out of Choicesâ⬠touches upon this when the poem concludes that the speaker may have suffered ââ¬Å"in the projectsâ⬠¦ had I [she] not been so luckyâ⬠(p.19). This suggests that the difficult choices she has made as well as the experiences and memories she has obtained helped her see that what kept her alive was luck or fate. ââ¬Å"Ant Farmâ⬠connects with ââ¬Å"Running Out of Choicesâ⬠when the speaker states ââ¬Å"sooner or later, everything has a turn being vice.â⬠(T.H. p.21), similar to how corrupt ââ¬Å"everythingâ⬠becomes in ââ¬Å"Running Out of Choicesâ⬠Needless to say, there is a prevalent pessimism in both poems. The sum of all these parts is a powerful message: if knowledge, freedom and choices can lead to an unsatisfying or even haunted state of mind, then maybe a predetermined, unexamined life, even though more restricted, may be a more pleasurable way of living.
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