Sunday 7 January 2018

Breaking Out ISC English Literature Long Answer (Theme , Message , Literary Devices , etc)

Breaking Out

                                                    -Marge Piercy


Important points to note-
  1. Its important to capture the feeling of the poet in the long answer .
  2. The Quotes (in Blue) should be learnt by heart.
  3. Will cover five and a half sides of ISC booklet and can be finished in 30-35 mins.
  4. This is self sufficient to answer all type of questions . Depending on the question asked in exam , put emphasis on that part.


Marge Piercy is an American novelist and social activist. She was born on March 31, 1936 in Detroit, Michigan and did her graduation from University of Michigan. Some of her most sought out titles are ‘Storm Tide’, ‘Fly Away Home’, ‘Going Down Fast’ and many more. Her novels focus on making radical social changes while poems on political awareness.
Breaking Out’ was first published in the ‘Harbor Review in 1984. It potrays the double oppression on a girl child for being a girl, and a child at the same time. It also conveys to the readers her desperation to break free from the social constraints that normally restrict a woman.
The first stanza of the poem begins with a girl child’s assertion at breaking away from the conventional norms of a patriarchal society wherein a woman is treated as an inferior being and is subjected to a number of discriminations. As suggested by the line,
My first political act?’

The speaker in the poem, a girl child, asks the readers if they want her to tell them about her first political act, which she reveals in the later part of the poem.
The speaker sees her mother doing endless domestic chores as a routine affair. It is through her mother’s plight and her own that she is suggesting the role of women in society and their miserable condition. Rather than being thanked and respected for taking all the burden of household chores on their shoulders, women are tortured, physically abused and ill-treated. The narrator sees her mother doing expensing domestic work like washing, ironing, cleaning and mopping the floor on a perpetual basis.
A mangle stood there, for ironing
what i never thought needed it:
sheets, towels, my father’s underwear;’
The speaker says that she remembers the roaring, turbulent sound made by the vacuum cleaner when its bag is deflated. It shows as if it were tired of dust suction at home as she is.
an upright vacuum with its stuffed
sausage bag that deflated with a gusty
sigh as if weary of housework as I ...

The above lines indicate how taxing it must have been for a little girl to perform such chores. She must be feeling tired and sighing with pain, similar to the signing sound made by the vacuum cleaner when its bag is deflated. This leads to the growth of a kind of hatred against such domestic chores, which she swears she would never do when she grows up.
‘….who swore i would never dust or sweep
after i left home, who hated
to see my mother removing daily
the sludge the air lay down like a snail’s track ‘

It is suggestive of sowing of seeds of defiance in the speaker’s mind, which continue to grow with each incident of oppression she is subjected to. That is why, when in school she read about Sisyphus, her thoughts immediately go to her mother. She compares the lot of her mother with Sisyphus. The poem makes an allusion to Greek character Sisyphus, who was a cruel king of Corinth. He was condemned to roll a boulder up the hill forever because of the disrespect shown by him to Zeus. Like Sisyphus, her mother has to broom everyday only to see her house get dirty again by the ash and filth emitted by the factories.
so that when in school i read of Sisyphus
and his rock, it was her I
thought of, housewife scrubbing
on raw knees as the factory rained ash.’

The speaker here tries to raise her voice for her mother and womankind in general who have to clean dust deposited in their houses regardless of its effect on their health. The women are subjected to a number of such tortures which bring out their plight and agony.
The speaker then looks at a wooden yardstick, which seems to her as an offspring of the rickety doors because just like these doors were a source of her oppression by confining her within the four walls of her house (symbolic of conventional norms of a biased society which puts several restriction on a women) similarly the yardstick was also a source of her oppression as it was the brutal enforcer of her parent’s will.
...that stick was the tool of punishment,
I was beaten as I bellowed like a locomotive
as if noise could ward off blows.’
After she is caned, she inspects her lashes in the mirror. These lashes appear to her as blue and red ridges in some mountain range, as seen on a map. It seems she is looking for an escape route hiding in the map formed by the lashes, a route to freedom. This built up anger & frustration, because of the physical and mental pain inflicted on her, leads her to break the instrument of her oppression, the yardstick.
When I was eleven, after a beating
I took the ruler and smashed it to kindling.
Fingering the splinters I could not believe.
How could this rod prove weaker than me?’
It is this political act she referred to earlier, an act suggesting she had crossed the threshold of childhood and she has become an adolescent.
‘...but in destroying that stick that had measured my pain
the next day i was an adolescent, not a child.’

This act symbolises her inner strength that enabled her to rebel and defy her parents. She no longer considered the shackles of conventional norms of a biased society so powerful that they could not be broken. It seems that years of oppression on her from her early childhood and her yearning for freedom had given her the power to ‘break out’ of the suffocating norms of the biased society and prevented her from being another ‘Sisyphus’ like her mother.
This is not a tale of innocence lost but power
gained : I would not be Sisyphus,
there were things that I should learn to break.’


 Marge has used a narrative style of poetry to share her experiences and very skilfully she has used free verse which gives her freedom to say what she wants to say without interruption. Not having a detailed rhyming scheme has helped her put emphasis on the freedom to which women are equally entitled. She uses plenty of figures of speech to convey her feelings like use of simile in ‘...like a snail’s track’ to indicate the slow and continuous deposition of dirt. She personifies vacuum cleaner which ‘deflated with a gusty sigh’ to indicate her wretched condition after doing all the work.