18 pages ⢠36 minutes read
A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
In Kaminskyâs poem, individual and collective sensibility fuse into one. Critic Will Brewbaker claims: âFrom the beginning, Kaminsky makes his intent clear: he will hold up a mirror to himself, and, if we happen to catch our own reflection, we would be wise to join him in owning our failures â political, personal, or otherwise.â For Kaminsky, this occurs through the expert way he works with the American lyric: âwe opposed them but not / enough. I was / in my bed, around my bed America / was falling,â seamlessly shifting perspective between âwe,â and âIâ (Lines 3-6).
Brewbaker notes: âAs the scope widens from âhouseâ to âstreetâ and all the way out to âour great country,â the net of complicity widens, too, to include every reader andâimportantlyâthe speaker himself.â The house becomes a symbol for shared reality and interconnectivity. Not only the speakerâs individual house and comfort of their bed, but âthe disastrous reignâ also takes place in a house: âa house of moneyâ (Line 9). In this way, Kaminskyâs commitment to interrogate language in a time of crisis confronts the way language obscures and divides. As an alternative, he exposes and unites.
Kaminsky is obviously interested in how these the webs of connection are âinvisible.
Unlock all 18 pages of this Study Guide
Plus, gain access to 9,100+ more expert-written Study Guides.
Including features: