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Power and conflict
Kamikaze
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Created by
Mikey Whitaker
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Cards (17)
Kamakazi
A
one-way
journey into history, a
suicide
mission
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Kamakazi pilot
Left at
sunrise
Took
water
and a
samurai sword
Had a
shaved
head full of
strong ideas
Only enough
fuel
to go to
destination
, not return
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Pilot halfway
through
mission
Looked down at
fishing boats
and
beauty
of nature
Reminded him of his own
childhood playing
on the
shore
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Pilot
turned the plane around
Came
back
from his mission
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Pilot's
wife
never
spoke to him again or even looked at him</b>
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Everyone treated the pilot as
shameful
His children also eventually learned to be
silent
, to treat him as if he wasn't there
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This was not the
man
they had once known and loved
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Pilot must have wondered
Whether
kamakazi
death would have been better than this
emotional
death
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The poem shows an inner conflict between the
cultural military
and national expectation that he would commit suicide as a kamakazi pilot and the pilot's own desire to return
home
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Beatric Garland
Born in 1938 in
Oxford
Works in the NHS as a
clinician
and
teacher
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Poem structure
Tight
structure of
7
stanzas with 6 lines each
Written in free verse with numerous examples of
enjambment
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Tight structure
of
stanzas
Reflects tight control of
military
and
national
expectation
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Free verse and enjambment
Reflects the
freedom
and personal conviction the
pilot
wants to have
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Tuna
fish
Described as the 'Dark
Prince'
,
muscular
and dangerous
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Tuna
fish
Most
powerful
character in the poem
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The poem suggests that true power belongs to nature, and humanity's
efforts
are
futile
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Realization of how minute and unimportant human life is
Causes the pilot to
turn around
and return
home
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