[s3e2] It Feels A Shame To Be Alive - 🔥
: Frazar challenges Emily’s desperate attempts to maintain "hope" for her fractured family. He argues that "the most hopeful thing we can do is to look directly at the darkness," a sentiment that resonates with Emily’s identity as a writer who "doesn't flinch at the truth".
The second episode of Dickinson ’s third season, titled , explores the crushing weight of survivor’s guilt against the backdrop of the American Civil War. The episode centers on the departure of Frazar Stearns , a real-life Union soldier and friend to the Dickinson family, who leaves for the battlefield just as the family welcomes a new life. Core Narrative: Life and Death in Contrast [S3E2] It feels a shame to be Alive -
: During their meeting, Frazar asks Emily for a poem he can carry "in the pocket over his heart". She gives him the titular poem, "It feels a shame to be Alive -" , which she claims she wrote for "nobody"—referring to the internal "Nobody" she frequently converses with in her work. Thematic Analysis: Guilt and Hope : Frazar challenges Emily’s desperate attempts to maintain
The episode's structure creates a sharp juxtaposition between the domestic chaos in the Dickinson home and the impending reality of the war: The episode centers on the departure of Frazar