Analysis Of Dinosauria, We By Charles Bukowski

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Nearing the End so we may Start Again: Circle of Life Dinosauria, We by Charles Bukowski, is about the downfall of humanity and how priorities changed to greed, violence, and survival of the fittest. It is about how we are “born into this,” how we are born into a society where it is cheaper to die or plead guilty rather than pay the hospital bill or to get a lawyer. Where we are “made violent” and our “heart is blackened.” Where the good things in life are hidden from view like the “masked sun.” “The sun will not be seen and it will always be night.” Where in the end, the good is still hidden and “the most beautiful silence” is never heard. Charles Bukowski struggled with various addictions in the hardships he faced on the road to success. Those hardships created his …show more content…

From his point of view, he was just living the life that the people before him left for those in the future. The subject matter of his world is drinking, sex, gambling, and music. Bukowski was a creative underground writer who used his poetry and text to characterize the degradation of urban life and the downtrodden in American society. He relied on experience, emotion, and imagination in his work, using direct language and violent and sexual imagery. Born in Germany, Bukowski was brought to the United States at the age of two. His father believed in firm discipline and often beat Bukowski for the smallest offenses. He was also bullied by boys his own age, and was frequently rejected by girls because of his bad complexion. When Bukowski was 13, one of his friends invited him to his father’s wine cellar and served him his first drink of alcohol. It was magic to him; that

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