Q. How is conflict shown in the poem remains?
Conflict: the speaker is acting under orders and is engaged in combat in another country. The physical description of the place is dry and dusty, reminding the reader of images of newsreel scenes of wars. The men were ‘sent out’, showing that they were soldiers acting under orders.
Q. How is power and conflict presented in war photographer?
‘War Photographer’, which explores the internal conflict for photographers who shoot with their cameras rather than with guns. The poet of Remains also uses alliteration. Both poets use alliterative effects to create a sense of panic, disorder and to highlight the violence of war and conflict.
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Q. What is the message of kamikaze?
What is it about? The poem tells the story of a Japanese kamikaze pilot who failed to carry out his suicide mission and instead returned home in dishonour. The poem includes the perspective of his daughter, imagining how she told the story in turn to her own children. a tuna, the dark prince, muscular, dangerous.
Q. Where does conflict appear in kamikaze?
Kamikaze shows the impact that war has on those left behind. The reader is viewing conflict through the eyes of someone left behind, someone trying to understand the motivations of their father, to understand what made him go to war and what made him come back from it.
Q. Why did kamikaze pilots have Samurai swords?
It Was Supposed to be Psychological Warfare. a samurai sword, enough fuel for a one-way journey . They have been incredibly cool! To show an understanding of the relationship between a poem and its context.
Q. Why did the Japanese use kamikaze warfare?
Kamikaze attacks were a Japanese suicide bombing tactic designed to destroy enemy warships during World War II. Pilots would crash their specially made planes directly into Allied ships. On October 25, 1944, the Empire of Japan employed kamikaze bombers for the first time.
Q. Is Kamikaze a bad word?
Yes, yes it is. If you were to use that word in an offensive way against a Japanese person, they wouldn’t take it nicely. Even the younger people would raise eyebrows and most likely despise any person who used the term “kamikaze” in such a way. Japanese people are taught a lot about Japan’s culture, like it’s history.