Sentiment can be easily be stimulated from the readers by writing tender and sorrowful scenes. However, sentiment can also come from angry self-reflexive irony. Instead of the typical sentiment of warmness and sympathy, a different type of sentiment is produced from the words and actions of Daniel. The way he behaved so atrociously to his wife, but then reflected about what he did by addressing to the readers is quite ironic. One moment he is malicious to Phyllis, then the next he tried to pathetically appeal to the audience over his actions; the feeling of what is wrong with him is given by the readers. He does not truly reflect over his actions, but he uses his words to make it seem like he is reflecting to the readers. Doctorow is trying…
Through the use of vibrant diction, syntax, and ever changing tone, the author is able to create a dramatic, yet sorrowful story that affects the reader on many levels.…
The novel Ethan From by Edith Wharton tells the story of Ethan From and the tragedy he faces in his life. The story mainly focuses on the relationships between and among Ethan, his wife, and his wife’s cousin, with whom he is in love. Wharton uses different literary devices to develop the plot, including irony as one of the most effective. The use of irony in the novel, especially in the climatic sledding scene, greatly adds to the development of the tragedy.…
Janice Mirikitani’s poem, “Suicide Note” and William Shakespeare’s Hamlet both use simile, diction, and tone to express emotion. Both works use these forms of writing to establish a tone of deep emotion, with sadness and despair being at the forefront. “Suicide Note,” being about an Asian-American college student who commits suicide, was written as an apology to her parents for not living up to their standards. Hamlet is the story of a man who has just lost his father and documents the desperation he faces to revenge his murder. Both establish the tone as full of emotion and use diction and similes to emphasize this feeling.…
Three examples of irony in "The Interlopers" is shown when Ulrich Von Gradwitz patrols the forest, waiting for his human enemy to arrive, when one another assumes they will be killed by the other, however the wolves end up killing them, and that if they had worked together, they probably could have lifted the log off together.…
In The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, the author uses irony to expose the true character that Arthur Dimmesdale truly is.Dimmesdale is known, to the townspeople of the Puritan village in Boston, as a well spoken and profound minister who is their vision of God. Although Minister Arthur Dimmesdale has many qualities that make him stand out in the puritan community; his sinful secret that burdens him severely every day is heavily shown through the three main types of irony. The people of this Puritan community view Dimmesdale as their vision of God because he appears to be perfect and sinless. the more Arthur Dimmesdale admits that he is a sinner before his congregation, the more the townspeople see him as saintly…
In Chapter 26 of Foster’s How to Read Literature Like a Professor, he explains that any great literary work is dripping with irony. At first glance, a reader may not see the it, but a closer look at a book like Kate Chopin’s The Awakening will make a reader snicker at all the irony that comes to light. In The Awakening, the relationship between protagonist, Edna, and her husband is ironic. As Edna is approaching, sunburned, he looks at his wife “as one looks at a valuable piece of property which has suffered some damage” (Chopin, 7). Mr. Pontellier feels as though he owns his wife, but throughout the book she ignores his opinions, has affairs, and eventually leaves him. The relationship with her husband is not the only ironic one Edna has; she has a love hate relationship with her children. Trying to appease her “mother woman” friend, Adele, Edna says, “I would give my life for my children; but I wouldn’t give myself” (Chopin, 80). However, Edna’s death was very selfish because instead of saving her children, she took away their mother. Edna’s death was Chopin’s great irony in The Awakening. At the end of the book, Edna wades, into the sea, purposefully, until “it [is] too late; the shore [is] far behind her, and her strength [is] gone” (Chopin, 190). Edna’s great awakening, her realization of freedom and self, leads to her suicide. Once a reader is trained to look for irony, she will never stop seeing it, adding depth and humor to the reading…
Originally coming from Latin and Greek, situational irony occurs when the opposite of what one expects happens. Irony in literature has existed for many years. It keeps the readers engaged and heavily impacts the points the writer wanted to get across. In Chaim Potok’s book The Chosen, the author wrote about the faith of Reuven and Danny and the pressures they received from their communities and fathers. Reuven and Danny surprised their fathers and the reader with their ironic choices. The prominence of irony in Chaim Potok’s book The Chosen can be seen when Reuven planned to become a rabbi, Danny went to graduate school, and when these two friends nearly switched their chosen career paths.…
You are pretending to be friends with someone and are talking to them very kindly, but you actually intend on getting revenge on them for something they did to you. Your kindness is only a cover so that they will trust you and you can trick them.…
The goal of this presentation is to provide a brief overview of the relationship between the practice of irony and religious ritual. In particular, I will argue that we can understand irony as a technique for fostering human flourishing. In this respect, I take that human flourishing is inescapably connected to a context of institutions and social practices within which human beings live. Accordingly, in a way that I will spell out in this presentation, the practice of irony has consequences for the context of practice which define our pursuit of human excellence. Often, religion and its rituals make up for an important part of this institutional context. Assuming that to have a healthy religious life can be regarded as an of human flourishing, then the exercise of irony can help us achieve it. Hence, my argument is that the practice of irony bears the potential for questioning and reviewing our religious rituals, insofar as it brings the potential for questioning and a reviewing our religious life in general. My argument shall proceed as…
irony. By the end of this essay readers will realise how all the use of these literary terms helped develop…
In Saul Bellow’s novel, Seize the Day the author tries to show the connection of irony within the main character Tommy Wilhelm and the final scene of the funeral. He does so by showing readers the connection a stranger may have with another individual they have never encountered with before. This has to do with the work as a whole because in the final scene irony is portrayed.…
should live in harmony and laugh together. In the context of the play, the quote is actually quite ominous and foreboding. Aside from the tattoo being a false version of the actual line, which reads “we’ll live… and laugh at gilded butterflies,” the line is understood to portray the exiled King Lear’s attempt to console his daughter as they are escorted to prison, and the absence of faith in his own words. Of course, there is always the possibility that Megan Fox actually studied the tragedy of King Lear and chose the particular quote very carefully to symbolize and remember someone she lost who was very dear to her, with the hopes that their soul is in Heaven laughing with those that they loved in life. However, in an interview, Fox said that her interpretation of her tattoo was “to not get too caught up in Hollywood because people will end up laughing at you.”…
The protagonist also uses irony when describing actions, people and the setting. Morris uses two words in pair like sickly intensity, unashamed delight, exquisitely ludicrously, inescapably urban, blithe pathetic, lugubriously assure, dauntingly spotless and frighteningly well informed. Using two words that are opposite, Morris creates irony. By juxtaposing these words, Morris also creates imagery. It creates an image of what the mother sees as an outsider.…
Dramatic irony is when the words and actions of the characters in a novel have a different meaning for the reader then they do for the characters, this is the result of the reader having a superior knowledge than the characters themselves. Therefore, William Shakespeare introduces “dramatic irony” in the novel The Merchant of Venice to keep the readers engaged and wanting to read more.…