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Maung Shin Saw - KTV
Maung Shin Saw - KTV
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A visit to Maung Shin Saw KTV with Plato
Maung Shin Saw's KTV, in turn, strongly supported George Orphan's statement that "the unacknowledged legislators of the world are the poets."
It's hard to breathe just thinking about how money has become a law for the rich, and a prison and handcuffs for the poor.
The notes flying at the bottom of the pile of papers handcuffed my future.
I am... a nursery that has been deprived.
I am... a homeroom teacher who was expelled from school.
I am... a crow perched on a raven's egg.
The poem is not written in a subtle way, but carefully selected words that will make the reader feel and understand it directly. In the poem, the nursery school that is represented is taken away, the class teacher who is expelled from school is expelled, and the crow sitting on the egg of a surrogate mother is created by reading a news article about a surrogate mother. How much our lives as a surrogate mother are trapped under the contract of commitment that we have been forced to sign because of this fee. The poet has made a law with a poem called “Breaching the contract on behalf of the mother and us.”
Maung Shin Saw is now on KTV and other poems, in addition to -
(1) Wild Instrumental Poetry
(2) A kitten and other small items
(3) I know that he is the author and publisher of the novel "Hnin Yeik Pyay Dham".
This KTV and other poems are published in both English and Burmese, and most of the poems are in the Lyric genre. Today, the loss of human dignity. The goodness of humans is rejected, forgotten, and this society is full of wounds and wounds. Poetry is the best weapon to rewrite and write, and writing in the lyric genre is the best for me, which reminded me of what Edward Hirsch said in an interview. It was Elizabeth Bishop who labeled it the worst century as it got longer.
Our lives are also not structured correctly.
But this is a service that is weighed against darkness, sir.
"From Ambapali to Monica Bellucci, we are all
Overtime at your men's secret factory
It's dog teeth.
Maung Shin Saw, in an era when strength and skills are cheap, the words "dog teeth" are extremely painful, as teenage women are forced to shoulder the burden of paying for their brothers' school fees, the family's living expenses are weighed in the dark, and the overtime work in a secret factory is a burden.
Behind these words, the lives that are dark, dishonorable, and the loss of human dignity are deeply moving for the reader. The inequality of education, food, and living standards of future children who are being exchanged for these services, the seamstresses who are demanding a basic wage of 3,600 kyats a day, the thirty-five million children in Latin America living in poverty, and the African refugees, are the real realities around us, as seen and heard through this poem.
What can we do to create real hope for the billions of people in our world who are suffering from economic inequality and hunger? If we have not been able to address the huge gap in living standards for more than 40 years, how can we be optimistic about the world for the next 40 years? I read in Paul Collier’s book The Bottom Billion that an economist is worried about the future of society with statistical evidence. I also heard Paul Tudor Jones speak at a Tedtalk about these corporations pursuing their own interests, and the responsibility, greed, and social conscience of these corporations that will be considered for this bottom billion. I quoted Adam Smith, one of the fathers of capitalism, who said that without justice, our society would be doomed, and in the next 20 years, it is certain that driverless cars will replace 47% of American workers. If there is no justice, the economy will be, I've been accused of not being more than a number.
Poor
For thirty-five million Latin American children
Shakira shows off her perfectly round buttocks
I waved and shook it.
Angelina Jolie's revealing nightgown
The pink thighs
To the malnourished African refugees
Funds will keep coming in.
The poet clearly tried to use words to create a pleasing sound right from the beginning of this poem. The meanings behind the words are as profound as the scholars of Paul Collier, Paul Jones, and Jared Diamond who have highlighted the world today. I couldn't help but praise Maung Shin Saw for creating this poem that is not too many words and only 38 lines. I would like to quote Ted Hughes because it is necessary.
“A single soul is a collection of living parts in motion. Words, images, rhythms are living parts. When they all work together, the life that all of them embody is the soul.”
Maung Shin Saw was able to create this poem as a living word.
Looking at the bones
I don't want to live in the pyramids.
As quiet as a widow's house
I don't want to be on the calendar pages.
Threatened by birthdays
I don't want to live in a life of midnight madness -
Maung Shin Saw titled this poem “The Beginning of the Journey.” It is a poem by Maung Shin Saw, like Christie’s poem, with images of peace, chaos, escape, hiding, and sadness in a small town. I remembered the words of poet Aung Chae-in from the book Aroy Tu Riyar. I was sure that it was the beginning of a historical journey of a student at the Institute of Technology and a media officer for the 84th Uprising, preparing to flee.
"Only the brave ones
They were allowed to enter the hall of the god Odin.
"Those who lack courage will go to hell."
In the heart of the city
The four temples shook like an earthquake.
I remember the night when my lungs opened.
That night, the hills were burning with forest fires.
The first time I saw the first humans on Earth
The remains of King Asusu's crown
The night when the Earth's forearm was replaced
In telling the story of a person who played an important role in the student movement and their achievements, Maung Shin Saw's words spread and spread, infecting the reader. The images of the history of the eight-eighth century flashed and made me see the colors.
"Despite the heavy rain that has been falling all day today, it seems as if the two hundred and forty thousand-square-mile earth has sunk into Yangon City under the weight of hundreds of thousands of pro-democracy protesters," I kept repeating in my mind the headline of the Daily News (Saturday edition, 30988).
Maung Shin Saw, in his memoirs, was noted as someone who could create various forms of poetry, short stories, and novels. I can confidently say that he is someone who deserves recognition. His life is reflected in his art.
Maung Shin Saw, I firmly believe that as long as my silence cannot protect you, you will never be able to protect yourself with your silence. While running, I did not remain silent with this poem “The Beginning of the Journey”, and I recalled the great uprising of the Eighth Army, when we fought to protect ourselves. This journey made life glorious. It had a profound meaning. Maung Shin Saw, the beginning of the journey was good. It seemed to inspire us to have a good end to the journey.
I am sure that this is a good political poem that supports Marjorie Perloff's statement that politics and poetry are deeply intertwined, except for poetry that is forced to use slogans, political pamphlets, and posters as political poetry.
KTV and twenty-four other poems will be enjoyed by readers, says Hnisi Phyu Literary Library
It is produced with confidence.
White Rose Literature and Art
Visiting Maung Shin Saw's KTV with Plato
On the way back from Maung Shin Saw's KTV, I intensely came to be of the same mind with George Oppen's saying, "Poets are the legislators of the unacknowledged world." And when I stretch out my thoughts whether money becomes the law of the rich yet the prisons and handcuffs of the poor, I start to feel suffocated.
Scattered signatures at the bottom of the stacked papers Had handcuffed to my future
I'm.. a plant nursery being pulled out
I'm.. a form teacher being dismissed
I'm.. a crow squatting down on a cuckoo's egg
Without writing obliquely, the poet has specifically selected the words which let the readers recognize and feel without any barrier. The poet said that he had conceived the ideas of the signified objects like "a plant nursery being pulling out", "a form teacher being dismissed" and "a crow squatting down on a cuckoo's egg" from the news he read about the black surrogate mother. How much are we suffocating ourselves due to the contract we have dealt just because of money like that black woman? The poet has created the poem called "Cancellation of Contract" on behalf of the black woman and us.
Apart from titled "KTV & Other Poems", I've come to know that Maung Shin Saw has written
1) Pagan Instrument, Solo Poetry Book
2) Little Cats & Other Short Stories
3) Dark Blue Snowy Shadow, Novel
He has published this book, KTV & Other Poems in bilin



