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Homo Suburbiensis Bruce Dawe Analysis

Decent Essays

A part of Australian identity shown in both the castle movie and homo suburbiensis by bruce dawe is the emotional connection with non-human or inanimate objects. In Dawe’s poem “homo suburbiensis” the man has raised a patch of vegetables and the poem is describing his relationship with the outdoors. “A man alone in his patch of vegetables,” in this line the ‘patch of vegetables’ represents his territory, a place where he can vent his built in frustration and a place where he has total control of everything that’s going on. It describes him specifically being by the patch in the evening as during the day he cannot be alone with his thoughts while working so it is only after his work is done can be free. The line “and all the things he takes …show more content…

Dawe arouses our senses in the third and fourth stanza by stating through the use of olfactory and auditory imagery, ‘somebody’s rubbish/burning, hearing vaguely, hearing a dog, a kid, and whisper of traffic.’ However, in the movie Darryl doesn’t confide completely in his poolroom and the prized possessions that are located within it, he has a loving family in which he can solve his problems with and can share his emotions, he is more advantaged than the man Dawe describes in his poem as he has living individuals who can give him words of support and people who can give him the exact amount of emotional connection to him that he has towards his poolroom. Whenever Darryl states, “this is going straight to the poolroom” he says it with much pride which helped shaped my general understanding of the Australian identity being so emotionally invested in inanimate objects rather than their loved ones but also Dawe helped me create a sense of understanding towards people who choose to live their lives devoted to something else rather than a

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