Preview

"Homo Suburbiensis" by Bruce Dawe.

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
794 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
"Homo Suburbiensis" by Bruce Dawe.
Introduction: "Homo Suburbiensis" is as much a poem about the human condition, as it is a record of one man 's escape from the demands of his existence. "Homo Suburbiensis" uses one man 's escape from his demands to represent our universal need to contemplate and resolve our own uncertainties in life in our own special place. Dawe uses a series of imagery to depict the workings of our minds and a chain of unpleasent sensory experiences to illustrate unwanted intrusions in our lives. Through the vague depictions of these intrusions Dawe urges us not to give great attention to them, but to offer to the world, our most truthful emotions and thoughts.

"The man" in the poem is not just a one individual. Dawe suggests this in his title "Homo Suburbiensis". He has classified that man as an example of a whole (invented) species, as "Homo Suburbiensis". The invention of the Latin sounding word "Suburbiensis" is a reference to those of us who live in the suburbs and the suburbians being a status allusion to the ordinary, working class people. So the title is "Homo Suburbiensis", leads us to believe that "the man" is not an individual but a metaphor for the ordinary people of Australia.

"...Patch of vegetables" in the first stanza can be seen as the private territory of "the man" as it is "...his patch of vegetables". The "...patch of vegetables" which is in the garden, could be seen as parallel to the Garden of Eden. Eden is seen as a paradise for the man and this garden is also being a paradise to this man. This "...patch of vegetables" as a sanctuary is again implied in the third line of the same stanza by the ambiguity of the word "things". Dawe could have used the word "tools" but instead he chose the word "things" in the line: "...all the 'things ' he takes down with him there". This hints that the man does not have to take physical tools with him down to the vegetable patch, but also thoughts and problems that he has with life. This indicates that the "...patch of

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Throughout the context of the poem, Dawe places many biblical terms. Sarcasm and Australian Larrikin from a blue collar perspective is the only possible way Dawe expresses his tone through the poem. “God Almighty he laid down on the crossed timber.” This quote extracted from the poem creates a faint graphic of the crucifix and Jesus, followed by “spikes steady and I let fly with the sledgehammer… bones give way the iron shocking the dumb wood” where the brutal and blunt images are clearly shown through this. He supports these images…

    • 546 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the short stories “The Pedestrian” and “The Whole Towns Sleeping” by Ray Bradbury the idea of conformity is shown with the usage of characterisation in the short story “The Whole Town’s sleeping” with the characterisation of Lavinia Nebss. Similarly in the short story “The Pedestrian” the usage of imagery is portrayed through the description of the deserted town and the enslavement of people due to the introduction of television to present the idea of conformity.…

    • 659 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Bruce Dawe Essay

    • 2017 Words
    • 9 Pages

    Bruce Dawe, an Australian known poet, born 1930 is still one of the biggest selling and most highly regarded poets of Australia. His ability to write such influential poems has made an impact on a number of people, as each poem can be related to the ordinary living lives of Australians throughout the years. Bruce Dawe's poems are interesting because they comment on the lives of ordinary people. This statement is agreed on. In relation to the statement, three key poems can be linked being Enter Without So Much as Knocking (1959), Homo Suburbiensis (1964) and Drifters (1968).…

    • 2017 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Skrzynecki’s poems ‘10 Mary Street’ and ‘Migrant Hostel’ particularly demonstrate the positive and negative effects place can have on one’s ability to belong. ’10 Mary Street’ deals with a younger Skrzynecki’s experiences living within his working class family home in a positive environment whilst ‘Migrant Hostel’ deals with the very early memories of living in the migrant camps within Australia and, though it isn’t a positive atmosphere, is viewed by Skrzynecki as the first real place that he can consider ‘home’ and can therefore belong to. The Pursuit of Happiness deals with the issue of the need to belong to a place through the unfolding story of Chris Gardner and his son as they face barriers such as homelessness.…

    • 1249 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Dawe shows that everything on our planet is “fixed up”; it is never left untouched and natural. “A pure unadulterated fringe of sky, littered with stare no one had got around to fixing up yet”, which creates irony because of the word “littered” since the stars are the only pure thing Dawe mentions in the poem. Dawe uses exaggeration to express humor, in order to show the negative aspects of life. The extreme use of exaggeration is carried in the line “NO BREATHING EXCEPT BY ORDER. BEWARE OF THIS. WATCH OUT FOR THAT”, connoting that there are…

    • 841 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In her book "How Jews Became White Folk", Karen Brodkin examines the question of how Jews came to be regarded as White. She does this by first explaining how Jews were racially categorized prior to this time, and how they were considered to be inferior to the white race. Whiteness is and has always relied on continually renegotiated interpretations; that has more to do with ones social class rather than skin color. The argument that Brodkin presents is that the claim of whiteness are extended to certain races or ethnic groups at certain times, and that the past experiences of these groups cannot wipe away such indisputable social facts.…

    • 608 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    suburbia

    • 988 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Since the 1940’s, there has been a mass movement by Americans to live in the suburbs. They were searching for a sense of security, community, and open space that the city lacked. Suburbia was the answer to America’s discontent. It promoted the ideal community; with less crime and congestion. Suburbanites wanted to raise their families away from the cities in a wholesome, controlled, idealistic neighborhood. Suburbia became this romanticized idea.…

    • 988 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Bruce Dawe Analysis

    • 923 Words
    • 4 Pages

    In contrast to this, Dawe projects a different idea in homo surburbiensis that people are able to take control on what their thoughts and actions are. The last two lines in the poem “A man alone in the evening in his patch of vegetables, and all the things he takes down with him there” shows he is now in his own personal territory, alone with his thoughts, free of consumerism and materialism.…

    • 923 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This year we have touched on the self and then focused on how technology could jeopardise our existence. Times are changing and so are we; Technology will keep changing us like it has always done throughout history, change does not necessarily mean take over, technology will advance as an extension of us to help us improve not to allow us to reach perfection.…

    • 451 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Nicholas Poussin was a man that helped push French art forward with inspiration from the Italian Baroque art style, and taking his own influence from Greek statues. Copper references that Poussin used references from ancient Greece and neoclassicism to lead his art style. Also according to Plax, in his article “Belonging to the In Crowd” artists around this time in France banded together and started connecting and communicating with one another to build bonds and relationships. The Death of Germanicus looks like a painting of ancient Greek and Roman heroes going off to battle. He creates this mood of adventure, and somberness with everyone’s posture and facial expression. From the women crying on the right side, to all the men cheering around the guy on the bed. This mood from the figures shows progress in art to show expresstion.…

    • 430 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Hannah Arendt, one of the most influential political theorists of the twentieth century, published a book in 1958 titled The Human Condition. In this book, Arendt discusses many ways in which she views the human condition, but more specifically she discusses its relation to labor and work. She characterizes labor and work as essential aspects of the human condition. Arendt goes on to specify these two aspects in the sense of the public realm versus the private realm, as well as in terms of the social life, and in the political. Arendts dives into depth on how work and labor are politically significant acts and how they affect the private and public realms.…

    • 1235 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Herrick conveys the importance of genuine connections to the world around a character to belonging quite effectively in his book “The Simple Gift”. In one of the first poems “Longlands Road” the lack of connections between main character Billy and his environment are shown. The quote “This place has never looked so rundown and beat” uses pejorative colloquial personification of the town, to show his dislike, and lack of connections to it.. There is an accumulation of negative imagery in the lines “old Basten’s truck still on blocks, the grass unmown around the doors. Mrs Johnston’s mailbox on the ground...” this conveys the environment as un-nurturing and decrepit and further explains Billy's hate for the town. These descriptions are also a pathetic fallacy, paralleling Billy’s lack of self-worth and sense of belonging. The importance of genuine connections to your environment is further evident in Walwicz’ text “Australia”. The text is a feature article where the composer describes the country they have moved to. The anaphora of “you” and distances the composer from their environment, which shows isolation and exclusion. The quote “You desert with your nothing nothing nothing” uses repetition of the word “nothing” conveying the composers view that the place is worthless. The pejorative diction “You big awful” depicts the country negatively. These techniques show Ania’s negative feelings and lack of connections to the country. These connections…

    • 602 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Kristin Hoganson has a very interesting idea, which she defends very well with a lot of evidence. Hoganson argues that gender politics played a major role in forcing American into the Spanish American and Philippine wars. She makes many great points throughout her book, Fighting for American Manhood, which perfectly back up her main argument.…

    • 534 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The journey from childhood to adulthood, a growth towards maturity that everyone embarks on in their life, is one filled with great complexity and obstacles. The conflicts that one will face revolve around the social, sexual, and political spheres that affect each of us in different ways. Facing each of these aspects, this journey is made by Karim Amir in Hanif Kureishi’s novel, The Buddha of Suburbia. A young mixed-race boy who lives in the suburbs of London in the 1970’s, Karim dreams of the city with hopes of happiness and prosperity. The working and lower-middle class society was associated with suburbia in the 1970’s and the higher-class individuals typically lived in the city. Karim’s journey into the city is his attempt to break free of his ‘lower-class’ label in society, which was placed on him because he was raised in suburbia. In this new environment of the city, Karim’s sexual opportunities expand as he is subject to the free-loving attitude of the city, which is contrasted to the suburbs where sex was seen as ‘dirty’. As a result of racial discrimination he faced in the suburbs and the limited availability of sexual possibilities, Karim rushes to integrate with the accepting attitude of the city. Shifting from suburbia to metropolis, Karim opens the door to different cultural spheres of class, sexuality and cultural acceptance and each of these are reflected the difference of suburban life to city life. Karim undergoes maturation into adulthood in The Buddha of Suburbia, struggling to realize that, ironically, the suburbs that he rejected in attempt to find a place of acceptance and freedom is the very place that truly accepts him and brings him freedom as an individual.…

    • 1265 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In this essay, about Susan Cheever’s love for New York City and especially Central Park, we are taken on a visual trip through the streets of New York. In our modern society parents have an increasing urge to keep their children safe, and so they move them from the city to the country or opposite in an attempt to shield the children of any of the dangers, which lures all around us. But is this the right way to protect our spouse? Some people just fit perfectly where they are and I think Susan Cheever would agree with me on that. Some people need the city noises and some people will never get used to them. But one thing is sure. If you move a city-person to the countryside at some point they will go back to their roots, as we saw with Susan Cheever. Andy Warhol once said that it was better to live in the city than the country because in the city you can find a little bit of country but in the country you can’t find anything that resembles big city life. I agree on that. Even the biggest concrete jungles on earth have preserved some green areas. Some city may take it more seriously but every big city in the world has some kind of country in them. It can be found in art, parks and even the trees that are left in there. On the other hand you don’t see much of the city on the countryside. You can really tell how much she loves Central Park by how she writes. She uses a lot of adjectives and metaphors throughout the whole story.…

    • 793 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays