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Wilderness of Freedom behind Bars. The Dichotomy of Civilization and Animality in Ted Hughes' Poem The Jaguar
Wilderness of Freedom behind Bars. The Dichotomy of Civilization and Animality in Ted Hughes' Poem The Jaguar
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The difference between vitality and lethargy cannot be shown more drastically than in Ted Hughes' "The Jaguar", the second poem of his first anthology The Hawk in the Rain (1957). Indeed, Hughes was obsessed with the struggle between these two concepts, which he equated with life and death. Both vitality and lethargy manifest themselves, at the extreme, in the fundamentally different reactions of the animals to their confinement. Deeply connected with this contrast is Hughes' criticism of modern western civilization, which he poetically formulates in his poem: by his sympathising with the enraged jaguar, he turns strictly against the apathetic cosiness of modern civilizations, the most blatant failure of which he identifies in the loss of humans' animality. This animality, the magical closeness and return to the instincts and the primordial, inherent strength in human beings, is not only respected, but passionately emphasized by Hughes as a prerequisite for any vital humane existence. Modern societies that live in disregard for their animality and replace it completely with science and rationality lose their inner vital power and must eventually expire into lethal stagnation. That is why Ted Hughes depicts civilization and animality as diametrically excluding each other.
The following analysis aims at elucidating the thesis
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