icon-background-square
New
New
Year 11
Eduqas

Analysing the poem 'War Photographer'

I can explore how Duffy uses language and structure to present complex emotions.

icon-background-square
New
New
Year 11
Eduqas

Analysing the poem 'War Photographer'

I can explore how Duffy uses language and structure to present complex emotions.

warning

These resources will be removed by end of Summer Term 2025.

Switch to our new teaching resources now - designed by teachers and leading subject experts, and tested in classrooms.

Lesson details

Key learning points

  1. The poem reveals the difficult and complex emotions that a war photographer may experience.
  2. The symbolic space of the dark room might suggest isolation and depression due to trauma.
  3. The use of a tight and predictable structure in the poem may contrast the chaos of war with the order of civilian life.
  4. The final stanza has a caustic tone created through sharp plosives and mocking the insensitivity of indifference.
  5. There is a sense of disillusionment communicated through the poem’s simple monosyllabic final line.

Keywords

  • Indifference - lack of interest, concern or sympathy

  • Repress - to keep something under control and not let it come to the surface

  • Disillusionment - disappointment and lost faith over something once regarded as good

  • Caustic - sarcastic in a scathing and bitter way

Common misconception

Students may zoom into the suffering within the photos and not realise the complex emotions in the photographer himself.

Duffy, having seen her friends do the job of photojournalism, may have been privy to the complex and difficult emotions involved in this job. This could be why she focuses on the quiet trauma within the photographer.


To help you plan your year 11 english lesson on: Analysing the poem 'War Photographer', download all teaching resources for free and adapt to suit your pupils' needs...

The feedback for Task B can be adapted to help with whichever skill your students are struggling with.
speech-bubble
Teacher tip
equipment-required

Equipment

You will need access to a copy of the AQA Power and Conflict Anthology for this lesson.

content-guidance

Content guidance

  • Depiction or discussion of sensitive content
  • Depiction or discussion of violence or suffering
supervision-level

Supervision

Adult supervision recommended

copyright

Licence

This content is © Oak National Academy Limited (2025), licensed on Open Government Licence version 3.0 except where otherwise stated. See Oak's terms & conditions (Collection 2).

Lesson video

Loading...

6 Questions

Q1.
Who may Duffy have based her poem 'War Photographer' on?
her son who was a soldier
her own experience of war
Correct answer: her friend, a photojournalist
Q2.
Which war might the poem 'War Photographer' be based on?
World War One
Korean war
Crimean war
Correct answer: Vietnam war
Q3.
In Duffy's 'War Photographer', the reference to pain that is "ordinary", suggests the relative of the photographer's home country compared to the war zones he photographs.
discomfort
Correct answer: safety
peace
suffering
Q4.
Why might the war photographer in Duffy's 'War Photographer' see his job as a sacred duty?
it takes a high level of skill
he does it voluntarily
Correct answer: it can contribute to social action
Q5.
What does Duffy accuse the reader/citizens of in the final stanza of the poem 'War Photographer'?
supporting the causes of war
Correct answer: being indifferent to suffering in war zones
not doing jobs that are morally driven
Q6.
What tone does there seem to be in the final stanza of Duffy's 'War photographer'?
upbeat
patriotic
Correct answer: critical

6 Questions

Q1.
Which emotion is not explored in Duffy's 'War Photographer'?
trauma
guilt
Correct answer: joy
frustration
Q2.
Which word best suggests the way in which the horrors of war haunt the photographer in Duffy's 'War Photographer'?
"cries"
"stained"
Correct answer: "ghost"
Q3.
In 'War Photographer', which technique is used to show the separation of the photographer's hometown with the war zones?
enjambment
alliteration
Correct answer: caesura
Q4.
What is true of the stanzas in 'War Photographer'?
they are of different lengths
Correct answer: they are all of the same length
there are two of equal length and two that subvert this pattern
Q5.
The structure of the poem 'War Photographer' can be described as...
unpredictable.
unruly.
Correct answer: controlled.
irregular.
Q6.
Why might Duffy have chosen a predictable structure for the poem 'War Photographer'?
to show how pictures depict war easily
to reflect the chaos of the warzone
Correct answer: to show the stagnant indifference of citizens away from war zones