Friday, August 2, 2019
Scavengers and Nothingââ¬â¢s Changed. Two very different poems, written by :: English Literature
Scavengers and Nothingââ¬â¢s Changed. Two very different poems, written by   two very different poets, both of whom write with regards to their own   cultures, backgrounds and places of origin    SCAVENGERS and NOTHINGââ¬â¢S CHANGED    Scavengers and Nothingââ¬â¢s Changed. Two very different poems, written by  two very different poets, both of whom write with regards to their own  cultures, backgrounds and places of origin ââ¬â all of which are very  different. What could these two poems have in common. Ostensibly,  nothing. Scavengers is simply about the social divide between the  upper and working classes, whilst Nothingââ¬â¢s Changed tells of a young  manââ¬â¢s anger at being discriminated because of his colour. But after  even the most shallow disection it is easy to see the connection  between these two poems. Nothingââ¬â¢s Changedââ¬â¢s angry young man is  obviously a victim of other peoples racial prejudice, but the two bin  men of Scavengers are also victims of prejudice, looked down upon by  the middle and upper classes because of their job, their financial  situation, their parents.    Thereââ¬â¢s your first shared theme. Then you got the second: hypocrisy.  The hypocrisy theme runs strong in both poems. In Nothingââ¬â¢s Changed  itââ¬â¢s that this poem takes place after a law had been passed against  racial discrimination. Laws change. Attitudes donââ¬â¢t. There may not be  a sign on the door denying the young boy entry, for it is an unwritten  law that he is rebelling against. He is rebelling against the  attitudes of the people inside the resturant. With Scavengers it is  the entire American Dream that is called into question and shown up to  be what it is: a lie. The American Dream is that anyone, no matter the  class, creed or connections, can do anything, be anything. A person  born into poverty and raised on the streets can rise to be president.  All it takes is hard work, and you can be whoever you want to be.  Which is, of course, a lie. The current president of the United States  is a straight C student. In this country, he might have scraped into  Sixth Form by the skin of his teeth. He might have got to be a office  desk jockey for a paper merchant. But in the US, heââ¬â¢s the son of a  former president, argo ââ¬â heââ¬â¢s president. Of course, blood has nothing  to do with it *please read with dripping sarcasm in mind*. The poem is  quite clear in itââ¬â¢s message: The American Dream Is a Lie! Great  Hemocracy? Great Hipocrisy.    Thereââ¬â¢s another thing that connects the two poems. Itââ¬â¢s the idea that  many people in these unfortunate positions often hinder any sort of    					    
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