Some people may think that New York is always this big busy city with a lot of traffic all the time, which could be true, but in the city you will always find someone sitting in Central Park during their lunch hour, enjoying the scenery and all the action going around. This is exactly what Louis Dienes is trying to portray in the poem "Lunch Hour in New York", which is why I chose to analyze this poem. Though it is a very big and busy city, there's always someone who is ignoring all of that and enjoying the calmness of nature while having their…
Still, Truss speaks with such cockiness that sometimes it is hard to stomach. There isn't much in the way of themes and symbolism in this novel. One obvious message Truss wants the readers to take is that grammar and punctuation is important and we need to start to care about it more. She explains scenarios of bad grammar and punctuation usage which can lead to confusion to show us why grammar is necessary.…
As the narrator, Melinda Sordino, awaits her first day as a freshman at Merryweather High she describes, “the school bus wheezes to my corner” (pg 3). The authors’ use of personification describes the heaviness and panic that is set into the setting. When Melinda arrives at school, she describes, as others’ talk behind her back, the feeling that “words climb up my throat” (pg 5). This personification describes the want to speak up but is silenced by her feelings of anger and disparity. Melinda’s experience so far at high school hasn’t been perfect, but has rather worn her out “my bed is sending out serious nap rays… The fluffy pillows and warm comforter are more powerful than I am” (pg 16). This passage shows that she would…
O’Brien combines the techniques of anaphora, metaphor, and negative word connotation to do so. The combination of these three rhetorical techniques evokes a fearful mood for the reader, but also grabs his attention. The metaphors with the negative word connotation create detailed imagery of what O’Brien is discussing. All of these techniques together make the excerpt more intense, passionate, and consequential. Ultimately, they emphasize the overall main point of the excerpt- the horror of the Vietnam…
Throughout the article, Brooks uses syntax that is a organized to help guide the reader through the article and help separate the purposes from one another in the article. When Brooks starts off the article, he provides a hook that uses short sentences that are meant to intrigue the reader. These short sentences, with the use of strong verbs like “fighting”,“explode”, and “disappears”,…
Faulkner’s deliberate placement of his chapters in this novel is to allow his readers to understand each character and each character relationship in a way that is key in developing main idea of the entire novel. The first chapter is from the perspective of the Compson’s severely retarded son, Benjy. As a result of Benjy’s mental condition, he is incapable of forming clear opinions or emotions in regards to his family members or the events taking place around him. Benjy’s detached view point allows readers to get to know the characters based solely…
Perhaps one of my favorite parts of the reading comes from the very beginning of the passage after the description of a nucleus. Creating a setting that can only creating a setting that only could be described as the aftermath of war: pain, destruction, regret, innocence, and unknown. This paragraph set the tone for the entire passage because not only does it introduce the topic of war and its horrors but establishes an emotional aspect because the world once through a young girl’s eyes changes at the realization of what laid at her home a few blocks down. The progression and anticipation of what will come next leaves Griffin’s audience wanting to learn more.…
He finds himself in “a hungry fatigue”(4), hungry of knowledge and revelations, to fill his particularly shopping list he appeals to this “neon fruit supermarket”. This can be understood as a metaphor of what this society seem it can offer, however when Ginsberg gets deeper he is completely disappointed with what he sees,“What peaches and what penumbras!”(6) talking about the amount of disadvantages of this world in front of the good things. “Whole families shopping / at night!”(6/7), nobody is free of the dynamo of this society that sinks every single person in a hole of darkness, not being allowed to see what is actually happening. At the end of this paragraph we find a reference to Garcia Lorca, spanish poet assassinated because of his political ideas, “and you, Garcia Lorca, what were you doing / down by the watermelons?”(7/8), seeming surprise of seeing that even the greater defenders of the truth had to pass through that extrange circe where he was submerged…
First, Harrison Bergeron was a symbolic character. He was given handicaps from the handicapper general to represent who he was. He was required to wear a bag of birdshot around his neck to represent to weigh him down. George, Harrison’s father had to wear a earpiece that let out freedom sounds. This shows that the author uses symbolism and allusion to show that the birdshot and handicaps symbolize who the town people are.…
In Bradbury’s short story “The Pedestrian” characterization and symbolism are effectively used to reveal an intemperate demise in society caused by the advancements in technology. Instead of people worrying about scaring Leonard Mead from inside their houses, Leonard was scared of worrying the society within the houses fearing that the “lights might click on and faces [may] appear,”(1 Bradbury) by them being startled by him passing throughout the night. With the uprise of powerful yet useless technology and the downfall of a hardworking society, seeing people walking outside in the city at eight o’clock, they would be considered crazy for not catching up on their shows on Channel 4, 7, or even 9 and were the ones who had…
In this movie an Oklahoma family is forced to leave their land and search for work. They are enticed by the promise of work out west and they begin a long journey across the country. On their journey they take the audience on a metaphorical journey through the Depression. The first camp they lodge at is one where there is chaos and no order or structure to speak of. The people in the camp run wild, and that is an example of the chaos the occurred due to the lack of action taken by Herbert Hoover. Many Americans lived in tent cities they called Homerville’s. The second camp was an example of the extremely conservative answer to the depression or fascism, which was exemplified by the strict attitudes of the guards and policeman. The third and last camp where the Joad family finally finds work is a metaphor for the New Deal of…
In his poem, Flames and Dangling Wire, the first line immediately sets the scene allowing us to have a sense of where we are. The use of a simile in “The smoke of different fires in a row, like fingers spread and dragged to smudge” implies the filthiness of the tip and the smoke rising from the fires. This also causes the air to “wobble”, implying that the horrid stench of the area is visibly seen forming clouds of polluted air to block the sun. He also uses the simile “The city, driven like stakes into the ground”. This shows the unnatural nature of the city with giant buildings artificially implanted into the ground, left there to stand and become eyesores to land that was once full of nature’s beauty.…
In 50 - 75 words, identify each of the following by author, title, and context, and explain what the lines mean.…
Vonnegut implied that humans were nothing more than robots, trained to follow the same routine day after day. "Their imaginations insisted that nobody changed much from day to day. Their imaginations were flywheels on the ramshackle machinery of the awful…
In chapter 12 I think that Steinbeck uses diction to establish the tone of the chapter. Highway 66 is a famous road; it carried thousands of people west towards California during the dust bowl. The families who crowded into their used cars and learned how to listen for any kind of breaking down sounds. On the road they met mechanics and a car sales man who again try to rip them off, these merchants practically tell them that there is no hope or opportunity in California but they keep on going. In the chapter Steinbeck uses distinctive vocabulary choices and style of expression.…