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In the Waiting Room |
作者Author /  Elizabeth Bishop 依莉莎白•碧沙普 |
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Study Questions
"In the Waiting Room"
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Questions for Understanding & Analysis
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This poem presents the experience of a six-year-old girl as she goes to the dentist's office with her aunt. Can you describe in your own words the experience that she has? Have you ever had a similar experience? What does the girl see in the magazine? How does she respond to what she sees?
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When the girl hears her aunt cry out in pain she thinks ¡§that it was me: / my voice, in my mouth¡¨ and ¡§I was my foolish aunt, / I¡Xwe¡Xwere falling, falling¡K.¡¨ Why do you think the girl confuses and mixes herself and her identity with that of her aunt?
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In the second stanza the speaker tries to stay calm by reassuring herself that she is all right, yet a new awareness of her own identity keeps returning to her mind:
But I felt: you are an I,
you are an Elizabeth,
you are one of them.
Why should you be one, too?
What insight about herself is the girl just discovering?
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The girl comes to recognize herself as a female. What does that mean for her? Why does it frighten her?
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What does the girl in this poem come to realize about herself as an individual and a female in society?
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Application & Wild Association |
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Have you ever had a similar awareness with the girl's (see the above quote)? How different is this girl's sense of identity from the speakers in Whitman's "I saw in Louisianna a Live-Oak Growing," Dickensen's "I'm Nobody? Who are you?" or Frost's "Mending Wall"?
- The girl gets a sense of self-identity partly from reading the magazine National Geographics. When surfing on the web, what do you feel about your self-identity? A Taiwanese, or citizen of the world?
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