Analysis Of Poet's Work By Lorine Niedecker

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Lorine Niedecker’s poem “Poet’s Work” definitely engages in issues about laboring and working class tragedies, such as being fired. For example, she begins the poem by saying that her grandfather told her that she must “learn a trade” to make a living for herself (Niedecker, 3). This is a time when women have begun working, so her grandfather wants her to learn a marketable skill in order to survive. In the second stanza, the speaker begins to explain that since she must learn how to do something, she decided to sit at her desk and learn how to “condense” (Niedecker, 6). In this stanza, the speaker could be talking about wanting to learn how to make sentences shorter and create small and concise poems. This is obviously an act of rebellion