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Island man. Grace Nichols. Life on a Caribbean Island. Life in London. Imagine…. Differences between life on a Caribbean island and life in London. CULTURE. Guyana: Country on the north coast of South America; One of the poorest nations in the Western hemisphere;
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Island man Grace Nichols
Differences between life on a Caribbean island and life in London
CULTURE Guyana: • Country on the north coast of South America; • One of the poorest nations in the Western hemisphere; • Gained independence from Britain in 1966.
SURFACE MEANING • A man who used to live on a Caribbean island still dreams of this place even now when he lives in London.
Morning and island man wakes up to the sound of blue surf in his head the steady breaking and wombing wild seabirds and fishermen pushing out to sea the sun surfacing defiantly from the east of his small emerald island he always comes back groggily groggily Comes back to sands of a grey metallic soar to surge of wheels to dull North Circular roar muffling muffling his crumpled pillow waves island man heaves himself Another London day Island Man
IDEAS, ATTITUDES, FEELINGS • Ideas: • Comparing the simple beautiful way of life on a Caribbean island to the noise and rush of a modern city • When far away from home some people will over idealise it • Never forget where you come from • Attitudes: • Island man does not seem to feel at home in London therefore there is a sense of being out of place and not belonging • The opportunities of London are far removed from the beauties of the Caribbean • Feelings: • Homesick • Idealising the past / previous home • Regret • Dull repetitive nature of present working life
Back to controlled assessment… • TASK • In this assessment you need to use the poem Island Man by Grace Nicolls as a stimulus for your narrative. • Use the poem ‘Island Man’ as a starting point for writing a story.
Clear link with other traditions This word has many associations, but the predominant image is one of comfort and security Alliteration with the letter 's' very positive image Note the vibrant colours Repetition, as if he cannot believe it, or is reluctant to acknowledge Island Man (for a Caribbean island man in London who still wakes up to the sound of the sea) Morning And island man wakes up To the sound of blue surf In his head The steady breaking and wombing wild seabirds and fisherman pushing out to sea the sun surfacing defiantly from the east of his small emerald island he always comes back groggily groggily
Colour contrast, not vibrant but drab Comes back to sands of a grey metallic soar to surge of wheels to dull North Circular road Change of perspective here a busy road around London muffling muffling his crumpled pillow waves island man heaves himself Another London day Grace Nichols Repetition, as if he cannot believe it, or is reluctant to acknowledge Suggest comparison of a man heaving himself on to an island Stark last line, physically isolated, with no preposition or verb Capital letters but no punctuation in poem
Island Man • There is no punctuation in the poem. Why? What image does the Island man have in his head? How does the poet’s choice of language reflect that image? • There are more capital letters on the second part of the poem. Why? Think of the formality of capital letters.
Island: “blue surf” “wild seabirds” “fishermen” “emerald island” London: “grey metallic soar” “to surge of wheels” “dull North Circular roar” “Another London day” Island Man