Essay sample library > Comparing Nothing's Changed and Half-Caste

Comparing Nothing's Changed and Half-Caste

2023-07-10 23:00:07

There is no change, Half caste Half caste, there is no change, but two poems, but the theme is different, there are many similarities. Both Half-Caste and Nothing's Changed have announced anger. But their angry things are different. The anger to Half - Caste is to words, more specifically to words and phrases, and anger in Nothing 's Changed is to culture. Please use the Half-Caste Caribbean dialect. The changes are not written in standard English.

Culture is different from "half caste" in that there is no change. I can say that the "no change" culture is similar to the poem "half caste". T. A came back to the 6th district to find white there In this poem he explained how to handle them and how to treat him. What I would like to say is that the culture of this verse is about color and white people and how they fight. But in that poem, T. A states his own view and white people in anger words.

In "half caste", I think that racial discrimination is related to discrimination. Just like "no change". What I am seeing is mainly the discrimination term "semicast". The term semicast is used to distinguish people born by different colored parents and is now considered insulting. So this word is used for racial discrimination. Because it is opposed to colored people and used to insult people. In the poem "Half-Caste" this word is widely used as it will help to explain what John Agard said. "Half caste means that Tchaikovsky is mixing black keys when sitting on the piano and white keys are half symmetrical symphony." Here John Agard raises questions and Tchaikovsky's a white key And a black key, he said that it is a semicast symphony. In other words, Symphony is a commonly heard note when other keys are mixed, so it can be used to describe a half caste as a different person.