Its Raining

When dealing with the Dada images, it seems pretty simple. The first idea is about modernism and how theses maybe images from the future. But when viewing them, you have to take a second or two to think about what is in front of you. For me, I am still looking at them and I am still scratching my head. This seems to be a strech to the future and what may come from the war ending, but other than that I am still scratching my head.

The poem "Its Raining" is the most interesting to me. Not only for the way the text is presented, but why it is presented the way it is. Looking at it from a far, it seems very innocent and very childish. It fits for what he seems to be intending to say. He people viewed the time he was living in, it seemed very innocent and childish. But once you take a closer look at the details, the poem and way the times were were much more complicated than what people made them out to be. The war made lives crazy, much as the poem says. But it shows how somethings look one way from a distance but when you truly look at something in detail, you will see how complicated it truly maybe.

The poems reflect what the war did to the people that lived through them and those who particpated in them. The images suggest how life might be after the war ended. It is hard to image now, but the future was the only real bright spot for the people who lived in the war time, and modern ideas were what got them through what they all witnessed.