1 / 9

I Shall Paint My Nails Red by Carole Satyamurti (pg 29)

I Shall Paint My Nails Red by Carole Satyamurti (pg 29). I Shall Paint My Nails Red.

meadow
Download Presentation

I Shall Paint My Nails Red by Carole Satyamurti (pg 29)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. I Shall Paint My Nails Red by Carole Satyamurti (pg 29)

  2. I Shall Paint My Nails Red This is a short poem written in one complete stanza. The title forms the opening to each line and the poet responds by justifying why she wants to paint her nails red. Each line begins with ‘because’ and gives a full response to the title. The ‘red’ nails are supposed to represent all the different ideas in the poem: femininity, excitement, surprise, sex, embarrassment to her children. These different ideas address what it means to be a modern woman: professional, strong, attractive, proud, a mother, a lover.

  3. Subject & Themes • Femininity • Appearance • Pride • Stereotypes

  4. she thinks a woman’s role is to look good and brighten her environment she has self-respect because a bit of colour is a public servicebecause I am proud of my hands.because it will remind me I'm a woman.because I will look like a survivor. symbolises her femininity the red is a symbol of strength and resilience

  5. slightly humorous, but also indication that she is independent because I can admire them in traffic jamsbecause my daughter will say ugh.because my lover will be surprised. sweet and funny, she is fulfilling her role as a mother role as a lover

  6. another option she has: the poem is about being able to adapt to different situations – emphasised in the final line because it is quicker than dyeing my hair.because it is a ten-minute moratorium.because it is reversible. ‘moratorium’ – meaning break – it is something she can do to occupy herself this final line is key – ‘reversible’ means she can always remove the varnish unlike a tattoo or surgery. She can change her appearance in a subtle way to please herself, others etc. but the results are always reversible

  7. Links to other poems… The defiant feminist tone makes ‘Warning’ its obvious comparison. Both poems are concerned with stereotypes – what people expect of us. Satyamurti does not battle with expectations in the way Jenny Joseph does. She is a strong woman but seems content. ‘Not My Best Side’ is also linked in this way. ‘Still I Rise’ is another one for comparison as it is another strong female voice.

  8. Hints and Tips I would avoid writing about this poem in an exam as it is too short and simple to make lots of effective PEE statements about. If it comes up, or you do choose it as a comparison point, you will need to comment on its straightforward, bold style – one stanza with each line making a powerful statement about what it is to be a woman. There is a pattern to the use of the words used – ‘shall’ in the title, ‘’will’, ‘can’, ‘my’, ‘is’ in the later lines reveal definite statements about her life.

  9. Example Questions • Look again at this poem and another poem in the anthology written by a female poet. What do these poems reveal about what it means to be a woman? • Both ‘I Shall Paint My Nails Red’ and ‘Still I Rise’ are poems full of self-confidence. In which ways are they similar and in which ways do they differ?

More Related