Speaker or Narrator, and Point of View
Almost all of Trethewey's poems are written from the point of view of a first-person speaker. In many cases, the speaker of the poem is Trethewey herself, or a person from a historical moment she is focusing on. Her speakers are usually characterized by their reflective tone. Their language is often direct but rich with vivid imagery.
Form and Meter
Trethewey writes in a wide variety of forms. "Native Guard" is composed of a sequence of unrhymed sonnets. "Incident" uses a slightly altered form of the pantoum.
Metaphors and Similes
Trethewey's poems are often full of figurative language. In "Native Guard," the speaker compares the scars on the back of a former slave to the writing in his journal: "It was then a dark man / removed his shirt, revealed the scars, crosshatched / like the lines in this journal, on his back."
Alliteration and Assonance
Trethewey makes occasional use of alliteration and assonance in her works, though it is not a major feature of her poetry. In "Native Guard," there is assonance in the -on sounds of the line "song of bondage—dirge in the river's throat." In "Enlightenment" there is alliteration in the T sounds of the line "at Monticello, he is rendered two-toned."
Irony
The irony in Trethewey's poems often has to do with the contradictions of racial prejudice. In "Native Guard," the speaker notes the irony in the fact that he is keeping watch over Confederate prisoners who would have owned him as a slave.
Genre
The genre of Trethewey's work ranges from historical poetry to confessional poetry.
Setting
Trethewey's poems are often set in the American South.
Tone
The tone of Trethewey's poetry is commonly reflective and evocative.
Protagonist and Antagonist
The protagonists of Trethewey's poems are often members of marginalized communities. The antagonists are commonly individuals seeking to maintain structural racism.
Major Conflict
The major conflict in most of Trethewey's work is related to race and prejudice in U.S. history.
Climax
The climax of Trethewey's poems usually comes in the penultimate stanza, when the speaker reveals hidden detail or important backstory.
Foreshadowing
In the opening of "Incident," it is foreshadowed that a family has witnessed something unnerving.
Understatement
Trethewey's poems mostly avoid understatement, instead focus on the visceral details of scene, however brutal or harsh.
Allusions
The poem "Enlightenment" makes allusions to various real aspects of Thomas Jefferson's biography.
Metonymy and Synecdoche
Trethewey's poems do not often use metonymy or synecdoche.
Personification
In the poem "Incident," there is personification in the line: "the wicks trembling in their fonts of oil."
Hyperbole
Trethewey's poetry does not often feature hyperbole, as she usually focuses on the concrete details of a scene.
Onomatopoeia
Trethewey mostly avoids onomatopoeic words and phrases.