The writer’s technique in “The Tethered Generation” is subjective because the author makes the inference on how communication technologies have interfered with the ways millennials communicate, work, and interact. As stated in the article “while previous generations looked to their friends for direction, today’s technology allows a perceptual connection to peers, leaving little room for autonomy” (Tyler 478-479). The author’s choice of words reveals that she is trying to voice out an opinion against millennials’ …show more content…
Hymowitz’s exasperating tone in the article specifies her belief that single men are not dependable in any circumstances. The author consequentially identifies male peers as frat boys, maladroit geeks, or grubby slackers (Hymowitz 493). The author makes a visual connection with her audience that women are moving forward economically and the characteristics that men once possessed are no longer associated with words like “fortitude, stoicism, courage, and fidelity” (Hymowitz