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Sharon OldsA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
"Ode to the Hymen" by Sharon Olds (2016)
Another ode from her collection Odes, “Ode to the Hymen” uses similar figures of speech and literary devices as “Ode to Dirt.” For instance, in “Ode to the Hymen,” partway through the poem, Olds falls into an empathetic, intimate address, stating, “Dear wall, / dear gate, dear stile, dear Dutch door” (Lines 14-15). As another of Olds’s odes, this poem is important to explore to understand Olds’s collection and the way she’s using the poetic form.
"What is the Earth?" by Sharon Olds (1999)
This is an important poem about the earth to compare to “Ode to Dirt,” “What is the Earth?” is from Sharon Olds’s 1999 collection Blood, Tin, Straw: Poems. “What is the Earth?” repeatedly attempts to define the earth and its placement in the universe, but the poem continually doubles back on itself, indicating the complexity of the topic.
"1954" by Sharon Olds (1999)
Another poem in which dirt makes an appearance, “1954” is a very different poem from “Ode to Dirt,” but offers an interesting contrast to the way Olds’s speaker confronts and characterizes dirt. Again, Olds concentrates on the speaker’s relationship to dirt, which “then” (Line 1) was a relationship of fear.
By Sharon Olds
Blood, Tin, Straw
Blood, Tin, Straw
Sharon Olds
I Go Back to May 1937
I Go Back to May 1937
Sharon Olds
Rite of Passage
Rite of Passage
Sharon Olds
Still Life in Landscape
Still Life in Landscape
Sharon Olds
The Father
The Father
Sharon Olds
The Victims
The Victims
Sharon Olds