English, asked by siddharth9612, 3 months ago

moral and central idea​

Attachments:

Answers

Answered by palakgupta2395
1

Answer:

Engle’s poem, “Kinship,” is a poem to be read aloud to an audience. It is typical California spoken word wherein the writer is writing from heart, soul, myth, and reality. “Kinship” embodies all of these without apology.

She writes with adoration of her mother’s country, countrymen, and kin, but just a few lines about her Lithuanian grandmother, who only remembers, as a six year old perhaps, skating on a frozen pond. This mother of her father did not escape with memories, only her life.

Engle scribbles little emotion in this poem, just images. She does not strive for effect nor atmosphere. Not even background. In true literary form, without editorializing, she leaves the decisions up to her audience.

Similar questions