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Feminist Influences in Margaret Atwood’s poem Siren Song

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Margaret Atwood’s poem “Siren Song” is based off the original myth of the Sirens. In the myth, the Sirens were beautiful half-woman, half-bird creatures. They lived on an island and sang a beautiful, irresistible song, and any sailor that would be passing by and heard the song, would jump overboard. Ultimately the men would be jumping to their death because the sirens would eat them when they reached the island. Atwood went to Victoria College in the University of Toronto, where she was surrounded by a lot of women. Atwood is a feminist, supported the rights of women. Most of the women she has talked to seemed to have suffered at some point, therefore the female characters in her books and poems suffer. Margaret Atwood uses allusion, imagery, deception/manipulation, and syntax to structure her poem and uses these devices so cleverly that the reader is misled and then tricked at the end. . Atwood uses one of the sirens as the speaker of the poem, and doing that alludes to the concept of Greek Mythology and how tenuous and witless men can be. She makes it seem as though the siren is sad and needs help. “Help me! / only you, only you can / you are unique” (22-24). Because the siren appears to be helpless, she lures in the sailor. Relating to this is deception and manipulation. The siren says that she will tell the secret of their deadly song, when actually the lure is the song she is singing in the poem. “I will tell the secret to you, to you, only you” (19-20). So she is

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