HOW IS THE THEME OF SUFFERING PRESENTED THROUGH LANGUAGE, FORM AND STRUCTURE IN STORY OF AN HOUR, DISABLED, AND STILL I RISE
Volume 2, Issue 1, Pp 35-38, 2025
DOI: https://doi.org/10.61784/jlces3014
Author(s)
ZhiHao Zhu
Affiliation(s)
Kings' School Al Barsha, Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
Corresponding Author
ZhiHao Zhu
ABSTRACT
This essay explores how the theme of suffering is presented through language, form, and structure in Wilfred Owen’s Disabled, Maya Angelou’s Still I Rise, and Kate Chopin’s The Story of an Hour. While all three texts centre on characters experiencing suffering, they diverge significantly in tone, form, and thematic resolution. Owen employs irregular stanza lengths, disjointed syntax, and bleak imagery to depict the psychological and physical trauma of a disabled war veteran, using poetic techniques to convey the soldier’s alienation and regret. In contrast, Angelou’s structured rhyme and meter in Still I Rise reflect a rhythm of resistance and resilience, transforming suffering into a source of empowerment and dignity for the historically oppressed. Chopin, using prose, subtly captures the suffocating domestic suffering of a woman trapped in a restrictive marriage, highlighting a momentary psychological liberation that ends abruptly. Through varied narrative voices and structural choices, the three texts present suffering as either irreversible tragedy, a force for emancipation, or a fleeting experience shaped by social constraints. This comparative analysis highlights how literary techniques shape and differentiate responses to suffering across gender, historical, and cultural contexts.
KEYWORDS
Suffering in literature; Form and structure; Trauma and resilience; War and disability; Feminist perspectives
CITE THIS PAPER
ZhiHao Zhu. How is the theme of suffering presented through language, form and structure in Story of an Hour, Disabled, and Still I Rise. Journal of Language, Culture and Education Studies. 2025, 2(1): 35-38. DOI: https://doi.org/10.61784/jlces3014.
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