(Mrs. Goodman now stands up and heads to look at the grandfather clock sitting near the window. Mr. Goodman closes his book as his wife checks the time.) Mrs. Goodman: It’s almost time Les, we need to get going or you know what will happen. Goodman: Alright, well we better turn off the lights too.…
Porter uses dialogue first and foremost to show the vast difference between what what we want to say and what we really end up saying. A great example of this would be Granny’s dislike towards the doctor. Granny makes comments here and there such as, “Where were you forty years ago when I pulled through milk-leg and double pneumonia? You weren’t even born.” (7) but she can not manage to come up with the exact words to say to convey her anger properly. The structure of her insults simply sound snappy and almost like whining instead of angry or purposeful. Granny’s lack of ability to relay the true meaning of her emotions shows the reader that she is slowly losing her grip on reality. The way Porter uses dialogue also serves as a theme for the…
* Grandfather tells about how he and his brother got separated and asks about how rich Joan’s father was. He says that he thought his brother would come back and help them financially. Joan gets quite defensive of her father.…
* People didn’t have lasting friendships; refer to when Whit sees the magazine with the old worker’s letter in it. No one remembers this man. (pg. 46-47)…
The nuclear family with two children and their parents, living together, is represented by the Carver family. Ken Carver (father) s a working man and supports his family while Betty Carver is a stay at home mother. And she performs the household duties. This is the sort of family that, in the past, society has supported. This sort of family is supposed to demonstrate love, security, acceptance and stability. These are the characteristics that children value. The Carver family showed glimpses of these characteristics. Love, shown by Betty Carver, towards her children, and security through the father providing money and material goods. However, this is not the sort of security a child looks for. This family does not function as well as it could. Small town country life may be okay for Ken Carver, but it seems to stifle his wife, and that leads to the breakdown of a happy marriage, and eventually the breakdown of the family life. This family is far from ideal. It does not work and the…
Phil’s relationship with his family is another place where Goodman uses rhetorical devices to place heavy fault on him. The image created as she writes about his eldest son “researching his father” by scouring the neighborhood talks of the distance in their relationship. Their family dynamic is obviously strangly skewed from what would normally be expected in a household. Seeing as the children’s relationship with their mother is intact, Goodman must be trying to communicate with the audience that Phil is to be held accountable. Another image of Phil’s faults are created as Goodman talks about the dynamic within Phil’s marriage, stating that his wife stopped believing she was more important than his work years ago, “when the children were small.”…
Goodman utilized numerical diction throughout the story. Goodman demonstrated numerical diction with a phrase like “fifty-one years old,” and that he worked “six days a week,” on a “four-day week.” Goodman did this to convey how Phil’s life was all facts and statistics with little meaning outside of work. All aspects of his life were considered work, even “ a monthly golf game,” was an obligation that needed to be accomplished. He cared so much about his job and getting things done that he took for granted the simple things that should have brought love and happiness into his life. The numbers were the motivation and key principles in his life rather than his family, friends and…
1. What is revealed in the first seven paragraphs about the characters of Goodman Brown and Faith?…
Goodman sets out on a spiritual journey to overcome his fears and to find his spiritualism rather it be to stay with Christianity or to find another road. Goodman is given a lot of trials and tribulations from both, God and the Devil. At the end of the story Goodman wakes up and finds his religion and faith is still with God which makes everything else seize to…
Ellen Goodman’s attitude toward Phil in “The Company Man” seems to be frustration and disappointment. She explains how Phil, the main subject practically worked himself to death. He was a “workaholic,” meaning he put his work above anything and anyone, even his wife and children. This explains Goodman’s disappointment towards Phil because he let work take over his life and force him to push away his loved ones and close family members. The author expresses frustration by writing in the passage that Phil let work cause him to work himself to death finally and precisely. The obituary said that he had died from coronary thrombosis, which is a blockage of the flow of blood to the heart, caused by a blood clot in a coronary artery. Everyone who was close to him knew that instantly because of their knowing of Phil personally. Phil was a fifty one year old vice president who never stopped working, even on his off days. On the day he died, that Sunday was supposed to be his off day but he was still working. Goodman uses description to describe and explain how Phil worked himself to death. She stated that he was vice president at his company, he had no outside extracurricular interests, and how he worked like the Important People. Goodman also uses contrast and comparison to explain her attitude toward Phil as a working man. She compares Phil to his friends and acquaintances by stating that after Phil died, his friends and close ones began to think for five or ten minutes about how they were living their lives. They may have been going at the same rate as Phil, so after they seen him put to death by working, they began to think about how much they work and how they can avoid dying due to work. Goodman also uses…
The road to success for Ellen had a very tragic beginning. Her girlfriend was killed in a car accident and Ellen was living a meager life. She had many questions, but had nobody to ask. Ellen uses this anecdote to quickly explain a tragic event in her life. By letting the audience into a personal part of her life, she connects to them emotionally. This shows the audience that she is comfortable. Ellen this appeals to pathos; The sentences about her losing her significant other are very tragic, so her audience is sympathetic towards her. “And I was living in a basement apartment, I had no money, I had no heat, no air, I had a mattress on the floor and the apartment was infested with fleas. And I was soul-searching,...” is a climax towards her important realization about herself. Ellen’s soul searching eventually leads to her comedic success. This is a first hand example for the graduates: that sometimes terrible things lead…
Well now, Mrs. Freeman, she sounds like a stubborn person to me, one who hates to admit when she’s wrong. She sounds just like my mother-in-law. I wonder what was considered “important business?”[6] I wonder what happened to Joy’s leg. Sounds to me that Joy and her mother don’t get along very well; I wonder what put a strain on their relationship?[6]…
P. Morgan, Thomas Edison, BFGoodrich are famous businessmen of the 20th Century mentioned in Death of a Salesman. During a conversation between Willy and Charley, Charley tries to compare Willy to J. P. Morgan saying, “Why must everybody like you? Who liked J. P. Morgan? Was he impressive? In a Turkish bath he’d look like a butcher. But with his pockets on he was very well liked” (Miller 97). J. P. Morgan was known as an American financier, banker, and industrial organizer. He was in influential figure in the world of corporate finance as well as industrial consolidation. He had so much power in this area of business and contributed in the reorganization of highly profitable corporations such as United States Steel and General Electric. Charley is insists to Willy that if J. P. had no riches, he would not be well liked. J. P. is referred to as a “butcher” due to the fact that businessmen like himself are often emotionless and do not feel much for others but themselves. Businessmen like Morgan could not afford to make any mistakes because one mistake could have broken his entire company. Arthur Miller mentions J. P. to convey to the readers the indisputable similarities between J. P. and Willy. Although Willy was not nearly as successful as J. P., they were both deluded in gathering that money is everything. Nevertheless, living a cutthroat and power hungry life is certainly not living at…
This manufacturer of RFID smart tags was experiencing severe parts shortages, increases in work-in-process inventory, and other production difficulties due in part to the fact that it was running two distinctly different production lines serving two quite different industries – pharmaceutical and retail. In addition, there are longer-range concerns about capacity constraints in the face of rapidly growing demand.…
Pg. 31-40: The narrator tells us about himself and his background. He tells of his father’s friend, who died,…