Shantung is a type of silk cloth; using this as the title
adds to the feeling of luxury that’s created through the speaker’s language.
However, Riley’s poem muses over the troubles that are caused and covered up by
extravagant lifestyles. The first-person perspective, along with casual, yet
elevated language, help to reflect the personality of the speaker. The use of
phrases such as “come on everybody. Especially you girls” (Riley) and “My
friends! Some answers” (Riley) set a friendly, open tone, and makes the reader
feel more personally connected to the speaker. This gives insight towards the
speaker’s background as well; she’s probably wealthy, because she has time to
speak and gossip with her friends, rather than having to work to earn a living.
However, the friendly, generally joyful tone is often
contradicted by the dark topics that the woman speaks about. She says ‘How much
mascara washes away each day/ and internationally, making the blue one black”
(Riley). The mascara is used to symbolize the fakeness of high-class society,
which, when washed away, leaves something darker than it was before. Riley’s
stating that being rich corrupts people. This statement is further backed up
when the speaker, after addressing her friends, suddenly says “Each day I think
of something about dying/ Does everybody? Do they think that, I mean,” (Riley).
The sudden mention of a gloomy topic shows that, while the speaker is
surrounded by luxuries like wristwatches and silk and makeup, inside she’s
becoming depressed, but the riches cover up her depression so no one sees.
In Angela Carter’s “Nights at the Circus”, Fevvers also
begins to question the sincerity of her lavish lifestyles, and as she does so,
her change is symbolically reflected by her altered physical appearance. "Every day, the tropic bird looked
more and more like the London sparrow as which it had started out in life, as
if a spell were unraveling" (Carter 271). In the poem, it also states
"mascara washes away" (Riley), like the color of Fevvers' hair and
wings. "Making the blue one black" also reflects the depression and
uncertainty that Fevvers shows as a result of her transformation. As the colors
get darker in the poem, the colors of Fevvers' wings and hair change, and her confidence
and feeling of self-certainty lessen. This feeling of being unsure is also seen
in both the poem and the novel through the symbolic use of time. In the poem,
it says "unstrap my wristwatch. Lay it face down" (Riley), showing
that the speaker is trying to eliminate the feeling of time passing. Time is
also stopped in Nights at the Circus, when Walser first interviews Fevvers and
the clock strikes midnight several times. Fevvers also eventually loses her
Father Time clock. "Something's going on. Something we wot not of, my
dear. Remember we have lost our clock; remember Father Time has many children
and I think it was his bastard offspring inherited this region" (Carter
272). The women in these pieces have somehow lost their ability to perceive
time (thus losing their own self-confidence) and, as a result, must escape from
the rich lifestyle they once knew in order to become the woman they truly want
to be and re-gain that ability to move forward in time.
In this poem, you mentioned that time is used as a symbol. Within the poem, and Carter's writing I believe, a loss of time is a loss of worry. I love how true this idea is in reality. Sometimes it seems the best times are those times when we completely lose ourselves in some event or some conversation. We don't know where the time goes, but we don't have to worry either because we enjoyed what we were doing. Also, you did a great job pointing out numerous literary devices!
ReplyDeleteI remembered listening to your presentation and wondering what the purpose of shantung being a type of expensive silk cloth was, but reading your analysis answered that for me. The idea of shantung as a symbol for extravangence that covers up troubles, however, has a negative connotation. On the other hand, losing ourselves in something enjoyable has a positive connotation. This creates a complexity within the tone of the poem. Is there a purpose behind this complexity do you think?
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