Sunday, June 2, 2019
Cornelius Eadys Brutal Imagination Essay -- Cornelius Eady Poetry Bru
Cornelius Eadys Brutal ImaginationWhile most fictional characters are given a voice with which to express themselves, that voice unremarkably does not stray beyond their realm of fiction and therefore is restricted from the power of the real world. The imaginary inglorious man that Susan Smith falsely claimed had abducted her children in 1994, however, existed in reality in the minds of the American public for nine days until the truth surfaced about her infanticide. Cornelius Eadys poetry cycle, Brutal Imagination, serves to give that imaginary black man ( hereinafter referred to as Zero), a voice that draws power from his simultaneous existence in both the real and fictional realms. Zeros voice serves to explicate a variety of aspects of his existence, including assertions of his own innocence, criticisms of Susan Smith, explorations of his paradoxical nature, and social commentary regarding the notions of free will versus powerful exterior forces. Zero is the product of Susan Smiths and Cornelius Eadys imaginations, and therefore lacks his own capacity for free will. Eady, however, allows Zero the seeming capacity for free thought and opinion, and therefore the opinions expressed by the character will hereafter be declared to be those of Zero, rather than Eady. Lucid of his lack of free will, Zero admits, I float in forces / I cant evermore control (17). In the effort to discover what these external forces are, he feels compelled to explore his origins that caused his inception in the mind of Susan Smith. The attempt is made to explain various conjectural examples of potential interactions that led to his ultimate creation. He assumes that at a young age, Susan was told that that All blacks do... ...t actually be dead. And here is the one good thing / If Zero is alive, then so, briefly, are the children (7). This abandonment of reality did not necessarily happen or may have been transient, but Zero simply maintains its existenc e as a possibility. Though described as dull in his invented hide (28) by Uncle Tom in Heaven, Zero is actually quite complex in his require to articulate his ideas about his brief life with Susan and his life eternal. His complexity is compounded further by his paradoxical nature, especially his simultaneous existence as a real man and as a fictional product of Susan Smiths brutal imagination. As an eternal symbol of the oppressed and abused, he could be said to maintain a symbolic reality regarding the existence of external forces acting against the oppressed, stripping them of the extent of their free will.
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