Friday, May 3, 2013

Eternity Careening Mercilessly Into the Cosmic Trashcan as the Perpetual Magistrate, Bored and Listless, Files His Nails With a Butterknife; or How I Know Lee Harvey Oswald Did Not Act Alone


http://www.loc.gov/poetry/180/091.html

Ben Groth
AP Literature and Composition
2nd hour
05/02/2013
Orient on Occident
                  Oliver Rice's Timely Enumerations Concerning Sri Lanka is a poem fixed and specific in
intent; it depicts the turbid swell of traditional life laced with the aftermath of colonialism  in
Ceylon, with negligible subtext or deviation. This concept and its aesthetic of anachronism
and discordance are conveyed throughout the poem with the aid of particular linguistic
choices. The literary devices used throughout the poem are integral in cultivating the
atmosphere that pervades the speakers account of a culture in flux.
                  As mentioned prior, the crux of this poem lies in a nation's tentative first sovereign
steps, a reemergence of a cultural archetype that now trails rent remnants of Western
hegemony. A panorama of dilute exotica is provided in this poem, and the dynamic of a
burgeoning land pulses and weaves under the cumbersome weight of prior attempts at
assimilation. The imperial times are now edified in decrepit figures studding a vital national
soil, explicitly in the case of the seventh stanza, "These are the relics of the Portuguese
occupation/ of the Dutch/ of the British/ of the struggle for independence," (Rice) and, as
their persistence in lingering over the country sterilizes national integrity, it is their presence
that lends the poem a transitory quality, an imbroglio in the uncertain, novel stirrings of
cultural reclamation. In addition to this, the Sri Lankan national character is naturally
fragmented, and religious and ethnic dichotomy ensures a precarious, incomplete unity (the
terms in which this is expressed in the poem suggest a striking disparity, "enclaves of the
Tamil Hindu minority, the Sinhalese Buddhist majority," (Rice) which is verily the case, with
insurrection being a volatile, ever-present prospect at the hands of the Tamil Tiger insurgents
after the recent, begrudging conclusion of a 25 year long civil war.) Together with the pairing
of bucolic setting, narrowly and tensely suppressed conflict, and machinery ("That is a convoy
of tanks, an elder fixing his shoes under the umbrella,") the awkward confluence of cultural
mores renders a portrait of a country, disheveled and inchoate, squirming at the foot of the
world.
                  From this foundation, the dimensions of the poem are expanded through the use of a
particular diction and approach. The poem's free verse structure and the prolific use
asyndeton and enjambment within bring something of a spontaneous flow to it, of the
unbroken current of observations emanating from an auxiliary. In this poem, the speaker
acts as a conduit for account, but is fundamentally removed from what is imparted, a notion
that is consolidated by the language used. A sojourner in the primeval turbulence, the
speaker relates events distantly and objectively, in conventional terms punctuated with the
occasional arcane phrasing, which evokes a sort of journalistic detachment, as opposed to the
solidarity and vicarious identification of patois. In addition to this, the idiosyncrasy of the
poem is furthered by the consistent presence of anaphora and antithesis, whereby a
sequence of distinct identities, displayed in tandem, are juxtaposed; a collection of
contradictions assembled to illustrate profound irregularities ("This is, that is" provides a
level ground from which a vivid series of disparities radiates, e.g. "The boutiques of the new
town, the tenements of the old town" (Rice).) These uneasily reconciled ideas are also
manifested in human terms at several points (“…who otherwise keeps records for the tax
collector,”) of which the most notable occurs at the poem’s end, a succinct encapsulation of the
varying conditions a population is pulled through in the throes of modernity and tradition: “That
is a souvenir shop/ attended by a girl in a white sarong” (Rice).
                  Under scrutiny and protracted analysis, the poem is revealed to comprise exactly what
appears at cursory examination. Its component parts find their significance not in the
embodiment of the abstract, but in their cooperative, cumulative effect in embellishing their
thematic base.