Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Oppression in Aunt Jenniferââ¬â¢s Tigers Essay -- Aunt Jenniferââ¬â¢s Tigers A
Oppression in Aunt Jenniferââ¬â¢s Tigers    Composed in three carefully rhymed stanzas, the poem can firstly seem  an homage to the speakerââ¬â¢s skills in stitching a panel with tigers.  However, a detailed reading reveals images and symbols that suggest a  relation of oppression concerning Aunt Jennifer and her husband.    The tigers of Aunt Jenniferââ¬â¢s stitchings are representative of her  free spirit, how she pines for freedom from her burdensome husband.  The ââ¬Å"bright topaz denizens of greenâ⬠ evokes the mental image of  majestic tigers not bound by the whims of another being. They do not  ââ¬Å"fear the men below the tree,â⬠ something that Aunt Jennifer cannot do  in her miserable reality because of her oppressorââ¬â¢s looming presence.  She produces her tigers under his control, represented by "The massive  weight of Uncle's wedding band [that] / Sits heavily upon [her] hand."  Physically a wedding ring is light, but this one has a "massive  weight" heavily sitting on her hand. These images construct an  opposition between the couple: as a woman she has a creative force,  but her husband, represen...                      
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