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Rereading Jamaica Kincaid's Girl

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Blurred Boundaries: Rereading Jamaica Kincaid’s “Girl” as a Prose Poem

Abstract
This paper rereads Jamaica Kincaid’s ‘Girl’ (1978). It aims at analysing the poetic qualities, word choice, and structure of the text that are left not fully discussed by recent scholarship. The structure as well as the poetic language of ‘Girl’ makes it an unconventional piece of writing falling between two literary categories and being hard to classify. ‘Girl’ apparently violates rules and transgresses conventions by being poetic and going beyond the traditional fictional structure of a short story. The paper argues that ‘Girl’ is an unconventional piece of literature that crosses the borders of a short story to poetry. First, ‘Girl’ obviously lacks the traditional structure to be classified as a short story. Second, the text embraces several poetic techniques which reveal it as poetry written in prose. Therefore, the paper purports to carefully consider the poetic techniques and rhetorical devices found in ‘Girl’ and makes it much closer to a prose poem than a short story. The story depicts a pre-adolescent female being dictated by the instructions of a sharp-tongued mother who teaches her how to become a lady- both in the private setting of the house as well as in public- in contrast to what it is like for a woman growing up in Antigua. This …show more content…

The two closing lines of the text are rhymed together. The word bread is a good example of cacophony. It starts with the sound b and ends with the sound d, both of them are cacophonic. This adds to the noise, tense, and overcrowded atmosphere of the story. Also, it comes as a confirmation of negative feeling from the mother’s point of view. Whether the daughter is given the chance to be the slut warned against or not, the mother seems to be certain that she will not listen and will turn into the

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