In the New York Times Bestseller, The Joy Luck Club, Amy Tan uses symbolism and diction to portray to the audience that the main antagonistic force stems from language barriers. The novel focuses on Chinese women immigrants and their daughters. All of the mothers come to America with high expectations and aspirations for both their future daughters and themselves. The mother’s first language is Chinese but their daughters grew up speaking English this causes rifts in their relationships’ because of misunderstandings and misinterpretations. A passage in the beginning of the novel tells the story of a woman that comes to America with a swan that was once a duck but stretched its neck in hopes of becoming a goose but turned into something entirely…
The video of Conan O’ Brien talks a man name Jack Bennie who was very successful and everyone thought of his success as an inspiration while trying to become like him. Johnny Carson wanted to be like him but he could not. The main Purpose of this video is to tell us that, we should follow our dreams, and know that life is not permanent. At age 25, Conan began to think that his job defined who he was, but end up realizing that it was not true. He wants us to know that our failure is what that defines us and makes us unique. He says through failure, you will be able to gain clarity and originality. Life is not permanent, so work hard, be kind, and amazing things will always happen to…
The canonical of “Strictly Ballroom” consists of a world in which ballroom dancing is the norm. Scott comes from a family with a history of ballroom dancing and has been training since childhood. Scott becomes very good and encounters resistance when he tries to dance his own steps instead of the more traditional ballroom moves.…
A Modest Proposal" by Jonathan Swift fits the satire definition because throughout the whole short story the man is proposing real life problems in society and turning them sarcastic. He uses sarcasm to emphasize how well he believes his ideas would benefit his country, Ireland. For example when he talks about the Irish eating their babies due to overpopulation. This wouldn't be an effective way to end the problem but instead people should stop having…
Literally and figuratively speaking, Catch-22 is a four hundred and sixty two paged mental exercise. It is ridden with paradoxes, a fragmented storyline, imperfect characters, and oddly-timed comedy, all of which Joseph Heller adroitly uses to illustrate a point. Drawing on his service in the United States Air force during World War Two, Joseph Heller utilizes Catch-22 to convey his anti-war message.…
Aldridge, John W. "THE LOONY HORROR OF IT ALL- 'CATCH-22' TURNS 25." The New York Times ON THE WEB. 26 Oct. 1986. Web. 5 Mar. 2016. .…
Sitch et al’s “Frontline” demonstrates in the episode, “…Add Sex & Stir”, how the truth can be easily manipulated with the aid of technology in hope of producing a controversial “true” story that will boost the ratings. It also shows how in the world of mass media, credibility is considered to be of vital importance and is practically treated as the product traded in the industry. Sitch et al satirises that commercial TV, despite having the absolute care for their own image, will go as far as extending the truth to the point that it ruins another person’s image, all for the sake of ratings.…
In the opening of his journey in the war, Yossarian discovers that he could exploit the hospital by fabricating his sickness to avoid the war. In fact, after Yossarian escapes from the hospital after an encounter with a patriotic Texan, Heller states, “outside the hospital, the war was still going on. Men went mad and were rewarded with medals [...] and [Yossarian] might have stayed in the hospital until doomsday” (Heller 16). Yossarian’s stay at the hospital to desert the army and depart his duty while avoiding patriotism depicts him as eccentric, a behavior stemming from the mental delusion and madness that he possesses. However, Heller’s commentary on the fact that the men fighting in the war might be crazier than Yossarian’s exploits of the hospital illustrates Heller’s notion that war itself is irrational. By characterizing the mass killing of the enemy as mad, and the seemingly cowardly escape of the war as “lucky”, Heller reverses and justifies Yossarian’s madness by placing it in context of the war’s irrationality, further proving that individual lives, or in this case Yossarian’s life, exists on a greater importance than the army and war. Similar to how Yossarian attempts to desert the war through the hospital, Yossarian asks Doc Daneeka if he can desert because of his insanity. Doc Daneeka then informs Yossarian about Catch-22, where the only people who can leave the war are ones who are insane, but people who ask to leave the war are the only ones who are sane. Heller utilizes this paradox is a similar way as the scene at the hospital to prove that Yossarian is in fact sane by his unwillingness to fight and that the perpetrators of war are insane. By casting his “discerning Eye” on the situations of aborting and avoiding…
“That’s really funny!” That phrase may bring back memories that are associated with happiness. High comedy comes in more forms than just sophisticated jokes, it also involves elements such as wit, wordplay, sarcasm, puns, hyperboles, and allusions. The two most important elements of high comedy allusions and wordplay are used by many comedians, television shows, and literature. Allusions and wordplay are important elements because they require the audience to think about what is said, keeping them engaged and amused. Through all of these examples, the universal truth of not judging a book by it’s cover is addressed.…
First of all, a quick summary of Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Anything. In the beginning of this story a respectable noblemen named Leonato, his daughter Hero, and his clever niece Beatrice are waiting on the arrival of friends from the war. The group of friends include prince Don Pedro, and two of his fellow soldiers; Claudio, who is an up and coming young nobleman, and Benedick a man known for his battle skills and witty jokes. Also within the group of friends are; Don Pedro’s illegitimate brother Don John and his entourage of two people. When the soldiers arrive at Leonato’s home, Claudio is very taken by Leonato’s daughter Hero. While Benedick and Beatrice continue a mutual hatred for each other through a confrontation of crude insults. Claudio and Hero shortly after meeting pledge…
He exaggerates the advice he is about to give the students. He lets you believe that he is going to offer you serious advice, but then he gives a humorous one instead.…
Dramatic Irony- It is a figure of speech where the audience has knowledge that the character does not. "Yossarian was in the hospital with a pain in his liver that fell just short of being jaundice. The doctors were puzzled by the fact that it wasn't quite jaundice." (Heller, 7) Before this quote occurs, we are informed that Yossarian constantly fakes pain to be able to leave the battlefield and go into the hospital. Heller use states this to show that the doctors are clueless to what is wrong with Yossarian. This allows him to stay out of combat, his goal all throughout the…
There are crucial parts throughout the novel that Hosseini wanted us at readers to visualize as we read. Three ironic moments illustrated in the novel that I picked was when Baba told Amir “Now, no matter what the mullah teaches, theres is only one sin, only one. And that is theft” (16). The second irony is Baba tells Amir that there is one better than a Pashtun by your side. “We may be hardheaded and I know we’re far too proud, but, in the hour of need, believe me that there’s no one you’d rather have at your side than a Pashtun” (140). The last irony I found unique is the lip scar Amir gets later on in his life that is the same as Hassan’s lip when he was little.Hosseini utilizes irony as a part of his book to give another push to the story. His ironic moments in the novel helps shape our understanding of the story giving us a perspective on both sides of a problem. .…
Goethe’s Faust and Voltaire’s Candide were two of the most interesting books that I have ever read! Both comedies were very different from each other in many ways. The structure of both books varied significantly. I enjoyed Candide more than Faust partially due to the structure. I found that because Faust almost entirely rhymed that it was harder to follow. It was very distracting to me and I felt as if the rhyming took away from the story. Candide was told more like a story and I found it easier to follow because of this.…
Kate Chopin’s “The Story of an Hour” which is a very short story is infused with an immense amount of irony and foreshadowing that somehow hints to the ending of the story before you even get to the first paragraphs end. The main character Mrs. Mallard has a deeply inflicted heart of being the oppressed subject of her husband’s wrath that ironically takes her life at the end of the story.…