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A* Grade AQA A-Level English Literature Poetry Coursework

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“The World’s Wife collection is an arena for formerly voiceless women who have been marginalised to tell their own story.” - For my A-Level English Literature poetry coursework, I chose to study Carol Ann Duffy's 'The World's Wife' and focused on two poems: 'Mrs Aesop' and 'The Kray Sisters...

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“The World’s Wife collection is an arena for formerly voiceless women who have
been marginalised to tell their own story.”
Using ideas from the critical anthology, what extent do you agree with this view?


From a history that is steeped in the achievements and greatness of men, the female voice
is often silenced. Duffy endeavours to tackle the inequality that has been faced by women
for centuries, as she weaves folklore and history with contemporary problems — taking
form in her compilation of poems; The World’s Wife. Duffy treats this collection as an arena
in which she is able to satirically entertain the reader whilst advocating for a much more
serious matter: female equality. Two poems that explore this view in the collection is an
arena for formerly voiceless women who have been marginalised to tell their own story are
The Kray Sisters and Mrs Aesop — both of which mock male supremacy and protest for
their voices to be heard.

Central to the theme of striving for female equality, Duffy often alters famous male figures
in order to provide an alternative female voice. In The Kray Sisters, Duffy has manipulated
the characters of the notorious London gangsters, (Ronnie and Reggie Kray) by imagining
them to have alter-egos, which take the form of two assertive and militant female feminists.
Even though The Kray Sisters are fabricated characters, references to real, formerly
voiceless and marginalised women are made within the poem, which is an example of how
Duffy weaves folklore with history; whereby she utilises The Kray Sisters to tell the story of
these women and reassert the female voice. The Kray Sisters is the only poem in the
entire collection that is not a dramatic monologue, and the selection of voices used are
arguably a stance by Duffy, who attempts to restore a voice to the formerly voiceless, as
well as advocate for this voice to be heard. Duffy draws numerous parallels between the
Kray Twins and The Kray Sisters in order to cement the underlying theme of female
equality which is central to the entire collection. Just as the Kray Twins gained strength
from their alliance of having an alike physical appearance, The Kray Sisters also note that:
“no one could tell us apart,” which suggests the power of female solidarity and compares it
to that of the notorious brothers; subsequently challenging male dominance when under
threat by formerly voiceless women who have been marginalised have the opportunity to
tell their own story. The use of cockney slang creates a humorous and sardonic tone that
mocks the patriarchy and reasserts femininity; such as “thr’penny bits,” which ridicules the
objectification of women whist celebrating feminine attributes.This accentuates the extent
to which this view can be agreed with, as women are often silenced against male
objectification, but Duffy provides a voice to the formerly voiceless, whom have been
marginalised against male supremacy and silenced from telling their own story.

The suffragettes are a central theme within The Kray Sisters, referred to multiple times.
They mention “a tough suffragette who’d knocked out a grand national horse,” which is an
allusion to suffragette Emily Davidson, who threw herself under the horse of King Edward
VII at the Epsom Derby of 1913 and died for the cause of feminism. Davidson died as a
result of the injuries she received from the horse, yet it is symbolic that this horse was
owned by a male monarch — two sources of extreme power that is emblematic of the
silencing and marginalising of women at male hands. Being unable to tell her story herself,
The Kray Sisters tell it for her, which again would incline one to agree with the view that
The Worlds Wife collection is an arena for formerly voiceless women to tell their own story.
Similarly, the mention of “Emmeline’s Army” is an allusion to the suffragettes and their
leader, Emmeline Pankhurst, as a unit — highlighting female solidarity which is reinforced
through Duffy’s use of enjambment in the poem in order to create a flowing narrative that
protests the idea that women have no hesitation in their aims in life, and by coming

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