Monday, August 19, 2019
The Context of Unrelated Incidents :: Unrelated Incidents Tom Leonard Essays
The Context of Unrelated Incidents    What is from Unrelated Incidents about?    this is thi  six a clock  news thi  man said n  thi reason  a talk wia  BBC accent  iz coz yi  widny wahnt  mi ti talk  aboot thi  trooth wia  voice lik  wanna yoo  scruff. if  a toktaboot  thi trooth  lik wanna yoo  scruff yi  widny thingk  it wuz troo.  jist wanna yoo  scruff tokn.  thirza right  way ti spell  ana right way  to tok it. this  is me tokn yir  right way a  spellin. this  is ma trooth.  yooz doant no  thi trooth  yirsellz cawz  yi canny talk  right. this is  the six a clock  nyooz. belt up.    * The poem seems to be spoken by a BBC newsreader.    * He or she explains why the BBC thinks it is important to read the    news in a BBC accent: no one will take the news seriously if it's    read with a voice lik / wanna yoo / scruff.    It is not that simple, though!    * He or she speaks here in the accent of an ordinary speaker/viewer    - just the kind of voice which the newsreader is rejecting.    * A newsreader would never really reveal his or her prejudices    directly to the viewer in this way. So what the newsreader 'says'    in this poem perhaps needs to be seen as the unspoken message (or    sub-text) of the way the news is presented.    Try re-writing the same poem in Standard English. Would it carry the  same trooth?    Structure and Language    Structure    The poem is carefully written in a phonetic version of the Glasgow  accent. If you pronounce it exactly as it's written, it should sound  more or less like a Glaswegian voice. Try to listen to Tom Leonard's  own reading of this poem, which is on the BBC TV programme Roots and  Water: Poems from Other Cultures and Traditions.    Language    The poet has played with language in a number of ways, apart from the  phonetic spelling:    * There is almost no punctuation.    * There are lots of slang and colloquial words (scruff, belt up).    * The newsreader talks directly to the reader (or viewer).    How do these features add to the effectiveness of the poem? For  example, there is a mismatch between the conventional image of BBC  newsreaders, and what this one is saying - calling the viewers yoo  scruff and telling them to belt up.    The lines of the poem are very short. What effect does this have  (especially when you read it aloud)? Does it make the poem sound  serious or amusing?    Tone and Ideas    How would you read this poem?    * Is it an amusing poem?    * Is it a serious poem?    Perhaps it is both.    Is the poet arguing that this is actually the way the media think  about us?  					    
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