are you still playing your flute - copy

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ARE YOU STILL PLAYING YOUR FLUTE ? GROUP:C2 GROUP MEMBERS: - MOHD.HAFEEZ - ZAINULLAH - MUHD.HAZIQ - RISKA SARIB - MOHD.YAHYA

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Page 1: Are You Still Playing Your Flute - Copy

ARE YOU STILL PLAYING YOUR FLUTE ?

GROUP:C2GROUP MEMBERS:- MOHD.HAFEEZ- ZAINULLAH- MUHD.HAZIQ- RISKA SARIB- MOHD.YAHYA

Page 2: Are You Still Playing Your Flute - Copy

POET’S BACKGROUND• ZURINAH HASSAN• Born in Alor Setar,Kedah in 1949.• Graduated with a literature degree in 1974.• Her poetical works,short stories and articles were published in

newspaper and magazine such as House of Art,Dewan Bahasa,Mastika and other.

• Her first published work was Tujuh Gunung Tidak Terdaki,which appeared in the Sydney edition of the Gazette Weekly in 1967.

• Other works soon followed and were published in the National Gazette and Utusan Zaman.

• Her career peaked in the 1970s,with the publication of two volumes of poetry: Sesayup Jalan and Di Sini Tiada Perhentian.

Page 3: Are You Still Playing Your Flute - Copy

SUMMARY OF POEM

• Through the poem, the poet expresses her anxiety about the events going on during her time. Event seem to be turbulent. The nation is going through a crisis. The village is deserted the rice fields are barren. Young men are unemployed and desperate. The political situation is plagued by disunity. War has broken out and people are being killed. In the midst of all this, a man is playing his flute. He is in his own world of music. The persona asks him a question three time. How can he was continue playing his flute with all the turbulence going on in the nation? And to make it worst, he feels guilty for enjoying his music and to long for his song.

Page 4: Are You Still Playing Your Flute - Copy

LITERAL MEANING

• STANZA 1• The persona questions herself if her beloved is still playing the

flute, when there is no time to show that one cares for each other. Though persona feels it is not right to yearn for his music from the flute, the tune is deeply attached to her affectionately.

Page 5: Are You Still Playing Your Flute - Copy

• STANZA 2• The persona finds that the village had been abandoned by the

villagers and the paddy fields un attended. She recalls that, admiring the rain, staring at the sunray during the dusk, collecting dew drops and enjoying the pleasant smell of flowers and nature had become a luxury or an advantage that you do not find anymore.

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• STANZA 3• The persona feels guilty for yearning for the special person as

her countrymen are jobless and willing to commit anything for a job. They are separated by different political views. People, whom you care for, are brutally killed. Meanwhile the world resembles a sickly and dying old man.

Page 7: Are You Still Playing Your Flute - Copy

THEME

• Family commitments• Priorities in life• Neglect of one’s duties• Enjoyment in listening to the flute• Turbulence in a nation

Page 8: Are You Still Playing Your Flute - Copy

MORAL VALUES

• We should be aware of our family commitments and carry them out properly.

• Everyone has priorities in, life and we should know what is important and what is not.

• Following a hobby is good but there is a time for work and a time for play.

Page 9: Are You Still Playing Your Flute - Copy

LANGUAGE AND STLYE

• Rhetorical question• Descriptive and questioning• Simple style and no rhyme• Conversational• Imagery and metaphors to express her ideas

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TONE, MOOD AND ATMOSPHERE

• Sombre and regretful• Serious atmosphere• Depressing• Gloomy• Disconsolate

Page 11: Are You Still Playing Your Flute - Copy

POETIC DEVICES• Imagery – e.g. ‘blown by the wind’, ‘depth of

my heart’• Alliteration – e.g. ‘fragrance of flowers’• Symbol – e.g. ‘flute’, ‘song’• Repetition – e.g. ‘Are you still playing your

flute?’• Figurative Language – Metaphor e.g. ‘The

melody concealed in the slime hollow of bamboo – Personification e.g. ‘sick rice field’