Electrical Strangers

905 Words2 Pages

The Nature of Electrical Strangers Technology has planted its roots in the grounds of society, and it is taking over. As John Updike describes in his poem, “Telephone Poles,” there are discrepancies between nature and technology. The progressive technological innovations have blinded individuals to the imbalance between nature-made and manmade. In Updike’s work, the foundation is the extended metaphor established in the title that compares telephone poles to trees. Through Updike’s use of extended metaphor as achieved through symbolic representation, tone, and verbal irony, he demonstrates the lack of human appreciation for nature and the human ignorance in failing to recognize this problem. In the figurative representation of telephone poles, the reader is exposed to the intrusion of artificial structures amongst nature’s natives. A telephone pole resembles a tree, but with a few mechanical variations. The typical sap, branches, and bark associated with trees are replaced with electrical currents, plastic tubes, and wood scientifically enhanced with preservatives. As described by Updike in the poem, it is noted that “Our eyes, washed clean of belief, / Lift incredulous to their fearsome crowns of bolts, trusses, / struts, nuts, insulators and such/ Barnacles as compose/ These weathered …show more content…

These elements further the idea that the lack of appreciation for nature is obstructed by the absent human conviction to see an issue. Through Updike’s comparison, he establishes the need to pay attention to nature – because in time, humans will only feel the impact of its complete deficiency when it is too late to change anything. It is crucial to note that organic beauty is temporary, and any factory-made replica would not be able to come close to what the environment amounts to. The marks that humans leave will only render cold mechanical machines if nothing is

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