How does Dowd create tension and pace in chapter 46‚ building up to the climax at the end? Dowd creates tension by using short sentences. She says‚ “I live. I work. I pump.” It creates tension by mimicking the sound of Mel’s heartbeat which lets you know her situation is very pressured. With the use of short sentences Dowd has been able to give away very less information and so it makes you want to read on to find out out more about the three sentences. Dowd also uses adjectives to create tension
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How Does The Writer Create A Memorable Climax In Chapter 5? The most intense moment in the Novella ‘Of Mice and Men’ is when Lennie murders Curley’s Wife in Chapter 5. Although something bad was foreshadowed from the beginning of the book‚ it is not until that shocking and moving episode when Lennie accidentally kills her‚ that the reader finally loses hope of their utopian dream of the farm and the rabbits ever succeeding. Chapter 5 begins with a peaceful description of a ‘lazy’ and ‘warm’
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Inside a mysterious hut in the forest‚ a bird flew through the dark damp trees‚ and ended up upon a house‚ which was right beside the lake. The bird chirped‚ as it listened to a cloaked man going through a story. The man reads his story out‚ in a soft tone‚ and gleams as animals from the forest gather to listen. "Once upon a time‚ there was a girl‚ which lived just beside a dark‚ misty forest. The little girl always wears a red coat‚ with a riding hood‚ so all the villagers called her ’Little Red
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interactions between characters‚ symbolism of characters‚ effective use of music and sound effects‚ words and setting. He does not use Acts‚ but divides the play into eleven scenes‚ as with all other scenes‚ Scene 10 naturally leads to a dramatic climax. He creates dramatic tension in “A Streetcar Named Desire” through the antagonism between Blanche and Stanley. Blanche’s dislike and condescending opinion towards Stanley are shown through the overheard conversation she had with Stella in Scene
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three of the texts you have studied. Climax or anti-climax are two really important techniques in gaining the reader’s attention and moulding how the plot of a novel flows. These techniques are used to mark various moments in Enduring Love‚ in Keats’ poetry and by Robert Frost. There are many climaxes over the course of Enduring Love‚ and they are significant for the overall destination of the plot. The scene in the restaurant can be considered a climax‚ in which men come in wearing masks and
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considerable amount of amplification. Richard Connell has several conflicts leading up to a suspenseful climax towards the end of the story‚ where the author comes out with a plot- twisting climax. He ends the short story with a resolution‚ that still leaves a bit of confusion on what actually happened. The author‚ Richard Connell‚ controls the short story using a first point of view‚ where an exposition‚ a climax‚ and a resolution were used to tell “The Most Dangerous Game”. Richard Connell uses the exposition
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In the Cask of Amontillado‚ many readers interpret the climax of the story in two different ways. The first way is how most readers would interpret it. It is when Montressor reveals that they are in his family’s vault and is going to close Fortunato up in the wall as his revenge for the insults that he has made against him. The second way is the whole ending of the story‚ where we learn that Montressor has gotten away with the murder and will eventually go to heaven. Plot is a literary term used
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anticlimaxes in Enduring Love Another climax begins at the end of chapter 21 with a phone call between Jed and Joe “I’m putting her on‚ OK? Are you there? Joe? Are you there?” Here McEwan uses juxtaposition of beginning an event within the formal closure of a chapter. The effect of this adds suspense to the novel as a whole as it wills the reader to follow the chain of events. Also‚ the panicked dialogue of “Are you there? Joe? Are you there?” heightens the climax by leaving it unresolved. McEwan
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The Freytag’s Pyramid’s example of a plot includes an exposition‚ an inciting incident‚ a rising action‚ complication‚ then on to the climax‚ ended with the falling action‚ resolution‚ and denouncment. To compare "The Most Dangerous Game" to this Pyramid‚ The inital exposition is shown in the first converstation that the short story opens on. Wherein Whittney and Rainsford discuss the value of human life compared to an animals‚ the exposition is Rainsford’s outlook on life and his statment
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imagery‚ especially during the first‚ second‚ and third climaxes of the poem. In Beowulf‚ the imagery for the first climax is full of surprise‚ violence and suspense. The suspense starts when Grendel snatches up the first Geat he sees and tears him apart. Imagery is used to intensify Grendel’s actions by tenfold. For example‚ “Grendel snatched at the first Geat/ he came
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