Image deconstruction poetry

The image of this poem is deconstructed as follows:

In the poetry creation of Yi Lang, a contemporary Tu poet, night is a typical recurring image. With the help of the image of "night" and the night scene as the background, the poet expressed the indifference and inner pain of human society. The "night" in Yi Lang's poems not only exists as a space-time background to express the poet's inner feelings, but also contains profound ideological connotation and embodies unique aesthetic value.

Hegel said: "Whether it is China's classical poems or the poems of all nationalities in the world, cognitive images are taken as the steps to deconstruct poems." Interpreting the night images in Yi Lang's poems can not only accurately understand the connotation of his poems, but also help to deeply grasp the overall style of Yi Lang's poems.

Explain in detail:

Night is a symbol with multiple symbolic meanings. Poets love the night and have special feelings for it. He also has a keen insight into the night. At night, the poet's emotional activities are very rich.

The repeated appearance of night images in Yi Lang's poems is related to the objective social reality, the poet's subjective consciousness and creative thinking. In Yi Lang's poems, the image of "night" has the following three symbolic meanings: the image of night is a visual social background. In Yi Lang's poems, through the image of "night", we can feel the reality Yi Lang has experienced and the society he knows: cold, dark, bitter, full of confusion and disorientation.

The rapid development of industrial civilization has brought false prosperity to human society, but behind it is the serious decadence of spiritual civilization. This deterioration is manifested in the communication gap between people, the loss of ethical values, the conflict between material and spirit and so on.

Yi Lang's poems reveal the crisis of this era and the poet's anxiety about today's social civilization. The real world written by the poet is very different from the world full of love and warmth in the poet's heart. Reading Yi Lang's poems, we can feel the conflict between the poet's inner world and modern society.

In the poem Square in front of the Station, the poet vividly describes the inner anxiety of rural people who have just arrived in the city. In the poem, he wrote, "Hold on to your luggage and get off the old bus from the countryside to the city/Pick up the lost soul/You must stomp the dirt off your shoes with a thump/You can dissolve into the greater silence of this civilized city."

The use of verbs "Jie" and "Stamp" here vividly reflects the embarrassing position of rural people who come to the city, indicating that rural people need to pay a heavy price if they want to integrate into the city.