“Orange Is the New Black: I wasn’t ready”
Some may say that the prison would be the best place to use the most extreme type of language. But it is true to say that it does not happen that way. On the contrary, in places like prisons, language plays a very important role. It can either lead people to death or to leadership. This automatically means that no matter where, emotive language will always be emotive language. It will always be either effective or not as well as fair or unfair. On the first episode of the series “Orange is the New Black”, successful woman saw herself falling into a world that she had never imagine herself getting into. At the prisons she learned that prisoners use language to express what they cannot take an action for. Every sentence spoken or words not well applied …show more content…
Comedy- Crime- Drama (web television series)
c. Jenji Kohan; Television Writer- Producer
d. July 11, 2013; Netflix.
e. No occasion
f. Netflix users, with a broader popularity among young adults from 18-25 years old.
g. The source claim how corruption, funding cuts, overcrowding and guard brutality can impact prisoners' health and progress in prison, and relationship between prisoners.
h. the author aims retell the memoir of Piper Kerman in a genuine and comic way. The author also aims to emphasize and show the reality of prisoners, especially in women’s prison by showing how y live and survive in prison despite their social differences.
4.Thesis
In the first episode (“I wasn’t ready”) of the series emotive language is implied to highlight the problematic of corruption, guard brutality in prisons, and conflicts with the business interests by using fairly and effectively slanting by emphasis, slating by selection of facts and dysphemism.
5.Analysis
a. Slanting by emphasis: the giving of stress to the subject of matter to indicate what is important and what is less