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  1. Poetry 4 Telephone Conversation

    poetry essay for telephone conversation

  2. Telephone conversation’ and ‘Nothing Said’ Essay Example

    poetry essay for telephone conversation

  3. IGCSE The Telephone Call Poem Full SOW

    poetry essay for telephone conversation

  4. Telephone Conversation Poem Introduction

    poetry essay for telephone conversation

  5. Unseen Poetry

    poetry essay for telephone conversation

  6. Essay on Telephone

    poetry essay for telephone conversation

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  1. "Telephone Conversation" by Nobel

    Introduction. The poem "Telephone conversation" is written by Nobel laureate winner professor Wole Soyinka. In this poem, the writer describes the conversation that ensued between him and a racist British landlady when he tried to rent her apartment. Poetry usually seeks to teach or reveal to us the beauties and ugliness of life and the ...

  2. Telephone Conversation Poem Summary and Analysis

    Learn More. "Telephone Conversation" is a 1963 poem by the Nigerian writer Wole Soyinka that satires racism. The poem describes a phone call between a landlady and the speaker, who is black, about renting an apartment. The landlady is pleasant until she learns that the speaker is "African," at which point she demands to know how "light" or ...

  3. Telephone Conversation (Poem + Analysis)

    Wole Soyinka's 'Telephone Conversation' is a lyric poem written in free verse. The poem is a dialogue involving a black man and a white woman. The two are indulged in a phone call throughout the poem. The poem, to a considerable extent, follows the question and answer pattern. That is, the white landlady fires away one question after ...

  4. Critical analysis of Wole Soyinka's Telephone Conversation

    Telephone Conversation is a poetic satire against the widespread racism still prevalent. in the modern western society. As the title suggests, the poem depicts a telephone. conversation between a west African man and a British land-lady who shockingly changes her attitude towards the man soon after he reveals his racial identity.

  5. Analysis of Wole Soyinka's Telephone Conversation

    Paradoxically apologetic and bitingly sarcastic, Soyinka's Telephone Conversation is a 35-line poem dealing with bigotry and the absurdity of racist hierarchies. Written in free verse, the poem portrays an African's attempt to rent an apartment in London. Describing a conversation with a prospective landlady conducted from a public phone, the poem's speaker recounts the experience of…

  6. Poem Analysis: 'Telephone Conversation' by Wole Soyinka

    Wole Soyinka's poem takes the shape of a dialogue between two people on the telephone, an African man and a white British landlady. The man is looking for somewhere to rent and needs a room, apartment or flat. But for the landlady, there is an obstacle: he's black. He knows that this fact could potentially ruin his chances of gaining ...

  7. What is the critical overview of Wole Soyinka's "Telephone Conversation

    "Telephone Conversation" is actually a biting satire against the racist attitudes of whites in the 20th century. Overtly, the poem deals with a black, educated man who is ringing up a white ...

  8. Telephone Conversation

    Source: Klay Dyer, Critical Essay on "Telephone Conversation," in Poetry for Students, Gale, 2008. Thomson Gale. In the following essay, the critic gives a critical analysis of Soyinka's work. Many critics consider Wole Soyinka Africa's finest writer. The Nigerian playwright's unique style blends traditional Yoruban folk-drama with European ...

  9. Telephone Conversation Themes

    The conversation in this poem involves several moments of silence and needs for readjustment, making their conversation one of tactics with power moves forward and backward. Soyinka refers to the speaker's phone call as "hide-and-speak" (Line 12), wordplay on the game hide-and-seek. The first silence takes place after the speaker says ...

  10. Telephone Conversation By Wole Soyinka

    Share Cite. The poem "Telephone Conversation" by Wole Soyinka describes a tense exchange between a potential landlord and tenant. Narrated from the prospective tenant's point of view, this ...

  11. Theme and message of Telephone Conversation

    The main theme explored by the poet in "Telephone Conversation" is that of racism and xenophobia. Through the poem, Wole Soyinka tries to raise awareness of the fact that skin colour should not matter in an open-minded and educated society. Issues like "light" or "dark" skin should not impede a person to carry on with daily life and ...

  12. Telephone Conversation

    Telephone Conversation Wole Soyinka The price seemed reasonable, location Indifferent. The landlady swore she lived Off premises. Nothing remained But self-confession. "Madam," I warned, 5 "I hate a wasted journey—I am African." Silence. Silenced transmission of Pressurized good-breeding. Voice, when it came,

  13. The Telephone Conversation by Wole Soyinka Free Essay Example

    The Nigerian playwright Wole Soyinka (born 1935) was one of the few African writers to denounce the slogan of Negritude as a tool of autocracy. He also was the first black African to be awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. Wole Soyinka was born July 13, 1934 in Abeokuta a village on the banks of the River Ogun in the western area of Nigeria.

  14. Essay about The Telephone Conversation by Wole Soyinka

    Open Document. The Telephone Conversation by Wole Soyinka The "Telephone Conversation" by Wole Soyinka is a poem that's title is very casual and straight forward. The poem's title shows the reader that what they are meant to read is realistic and free flowing. Like most poems there is a general theme that is carried on from start to end.

  15. Wole Soyinka

    The poem depicts a course of a conversation between two persons: one is a white English landlady and the other is a black African. The black African (maybe the poet himself) is in search of a house for rent in the city of London and he has had a talk with a landlady over the telephone.

  16. Wole Soyinka

    The poem comprises a single stanza, thirty five uneven length lines in free verse. There is no rhyme scheme. It is structured in the form of a telephone conversation, with snappy concise exchanges ...

  17. Telephone Conversation

    Type: Blank verse. Background. Written by Wole Soyinka - first African to win the Nobel Prize for literature. The poem is about a man trying to rent a flat from an English landlady. Her attitudes towards him change when she hears he is African. She is clearly racist, and the absurd conversation shows her inferior intelligence.

  18. Telephone Conversation by Wole Soyinka

    How the society makes life harder to people with darker skin. Troosh - This poem is very unique and special. A conversation between a racist woman and a black man made into a poem, with a humorous approach to this grim subject, something that is needed with serious subjects such as this one.

  19. Poetry Analysis: Wole Soyinka's "Telephone Conversation"

    Wole Soyinka's "Telephone Conversation" is an eloquent exchange of dialogue between a dark West African man and his British landlady that inexorably verges on the question of apartheid. The poet makes use of the most articulate means to air his views, through that of a telephone conversation, where there is instant and natural give-and-take.

  20. The Telephone Conversation by Wole Soyinka: Summary and Analysis

    By Prince Kumar / 14 Jan 2024. "The Telephone Conversation by Wole Soyinka" is a satirical poem penned in 1963, that addresses the issue of racism. It unfolds the narrative of a telephone call between the speaker, a black individual, and a landlady negotiating an apartment rental. Initially amiable, the landlady's demeanour takes a sharp turn ...

  21. PDF Telephone Conversation

    Synopsis of the poem: Telephone Conversation is a poetic satire against the degenerated and inhumane condition of black people in society. As the title suggests, the poem depicts a telephone conversation between a west-African man and a British land-lady who shockingly changes her attitude towards the man soon after he reveals his racial identity.

  22. Poem Analysis Telephone Conversation by Wole Soyinka

    Telephone Conversation" is actually a biting satire against the racist attitudes of whites in the. 20th century. Overtly, the poem deals with a black, educated man who is ringing up a white. landlady about renting an apartment and, we assume, is not allowed to rent the apartment. because of the colour of his skin.

  23. Theme and tone in 'Telephone Conversation' by Wole Soyinka

    Telephone Conversation was a poem concerning the racial discrimination between the Caucasian and African. In the poem, the poet wanted to rent a house from the landlady originally. However, after he stated that he was African, the conversation turned to discuss the poet's skin color swiftly and it lasted till the end of the conversation..