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Monday, October 17, 2016

Crossing the Red Sea and Migrant Hostel - Peter Skrzynecki

The impact of voyages have a major impact on the person as they do-nothing often outlast the clock beat it takes to make them, as on that point be obstacles to overcome and goals that they traveler wants to achieve. Journeys that ar physical are able to involve the geographic expedition of new and challenging environments, supply the traveller with fresh perspectives and perplexs and sights of the military man around them. A change of visual and written techniques are explored in poems Crossing the bolshy Sea and Migrant hostelry by Peter Skrzynecki and the alphabet documentary From Cronulla to Kokoda - Alis Story. The process of the transit is portrayed through phases of elbow grease and standstills, allowing the traveller to reflect on the impact of the trip and the time it took to make them.\n\nCrossing the red Sea concerns the physical pilgrimage of in-migration by sea, from europium to the Southern Hemisphere. Peter Skrzynecki has apply a variety of technique s which implicate imagery, personification, symbolism and setting passim this poem. Setting has been used end-to-end The Crossing of the red Sea, Shirtless, in shorts, barefooted in the setoff standz focuses on the people in particular. It shows the heat and adds an impression of poverty. The sunken eyes in the turn stanza adds to the description of the people, it suggests past pain, hungriness and despair theyve experienced. However, the second stanza withal proves imagery with peaks of mountains and green rivers, the pique has been changed from negative to positive and suggests flavour and hope. In the last stanza personification is shown with a blood line horizon and the crossing of the bolshy Sea. The tone is hopeful simply there is also a realisation that theres no button back due to the journey that was\n\nMigrant Hostel is another(prenominal) people which describes vividly the experience of an unpleasant part of the migratory journey, similar to Crossing the Re d Sea, this poem is about immigration to Australia in post orb war. Skrzynecki has us...

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