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A Study Guide for James Tate's "Smart and Final Iris"
A Study Guide for James Tate's "Smart and Final Iris"
A Study Guide for James Tate's "Smart and Final Iris"
Ebook27 pages17 minutes

A Study Guide for James Tate's "Smart and Final Iris"

By Gale and Cengage

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A Study Guide for James Tate's "Smart and Final Iris," excerpted from Gale's acclaimed Poetry for Students. This concise study guide includes plot summary; character analysis; author biography; study questions; historical context; suggestions for further reading; and much more. For any literature project, trust Poetry for Students for all of your research needs.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 26, 2016
ISBN9781535833394
A Study Guide for James Tate's "Smart and Final Iris"

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    A Study Guide for James Tate's "Smart and Final Iris" - Gale

    1

    Smart and Final Iris

    James Tate

    1986

    Introduction

    Smart and Final Iris appears in James Tate’s collection Reckoner, published in 1986, and is reprinted in his Selected Poems(1991). Though known primarily for his playful, often hallucinatory lyrics in which his speakers stumble about in a world of bizarre characters and events, Tate addresses socio-political subjects in his poems as well, highlighting the ways in which reality is often more absurd and dreamlike than dreams. Land of Little Sticks, 1945, for example, the opening poem from Constant Defender(1983), mythically depicts the moment when the first atomic bombs were dropped, and suggests that the world will never be the same. Like Land of Little Sticks, 1945, Smart and Final Iris addresses the possibility of nuclear annihilation and the ways in which that possibility affects the human imagination. In twenty short lines, Tate poetically describes the absurdity of the Pentagon’s attempt to account for various scenarios resulting from nuclear war. He does this by turning the military’s own practice of using silly code names for violent operations and outcomes against itself, in the process showing the insufficiency of language to adequately represent a catastrophe like nuclear war. Tate draws on readers’ knowledge of popular culture to write this serious but funny

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