"How does wilfred owen use language and poetic devices to create impact on the reader" Essays and Research Papers

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    The playhouses hosted popular theatre performances without stage-sets or props. Unlike today’s modern theatre‚ the simple ‘stage allowed for swift‚ fluid action and a concentration on language’. The Jacobean stage would have bought the colours of ‘language’ to life. For example‚ A vice figure like Iago would use exaggerated words and gestures to stress his strong feeling of antagonism towards Othello. Likewise‚ a melancholic Hamlet would experiment with words in an overstated manner (to show his

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    How does Wilfred Owen reveal his personal perspective in order to present a view on the challenges of life? Throughout his poetry‚ War Poems and Others‚ Wilfred Owen exposes his prominent opinion on the challenges of life and more specifically war. War is a life-changing obstacle for not only countries but also the men who are forced to go into war and the innocent men‚ women and children who are forced to be inextricably involved with the devastating outcomes. Owen reveals this idea of the challenges

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    understand this phrase better than Wilfred Owen author of Dulce et decorum est‚ a veteran of World War One. In his poem he tells a vivid tale of a young soldier dying horrifically in a chlorine gas attack. He writes this in a desperate attempt to end the calls for war‚ so there would be no more "children ardent for some desperate glory" sent off to war. Owen’s poem is in protest of young men being sent to their death in war‚ his tone is pleading and bitter. Owen titles his poem Dulce et decorum est

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    The sonnet ‘Anthem for Doomed Youth’‚ by Wilfred Owen‚ criticizes war. The speaker is Wilfred Owen‚ whose tone is first bitter‚ angry and ironic. Then it’s filled with intense sadness and an endless feeling of emptiness. The poet uses poetic techniques such as diction‚ imagery‚ and sound to convey his idea. The title‚ ‘Anthem for Doomed Youth’‚ gives the first impression of the poem. An ‘anthem’‚ is a song of praise‚ perhaps sacred‚ so we get the impression that the poem might me about something

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    Wilfred Owen’s poetry usually describes the grotesque reality of the frontline of WWI; however‚ this poem concentrates on the meaning of existence‚ and the futility (pointlessness) of war and inevitability of death. The narrator of this poem is having an existential crisis; what is the point of being born if you are just going to die a few years later? It is common for people to question death and what comes after death‚ especially if that person is surrounded by death or on the verge of death themselves

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    Hemingway uses a variety of literary techniques to produce a sense of ambiguity in the reader in Cat in the Rain. He starts by using rain to evoke feelings such as melancholy and emptiness in the reader. He then uses techniques such as characterization‚ repetition and symbolisms to express feelings in the characters and to further develop the text. Through her actions and words‚ we may find that the American wife is probably the most pivotal character throughout the text. In fact‚ what seems to be

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    (Aristophanes). This is a direct correlation of how a woman was thought of in Ancient Greece. In its simplest terms‚ the Lysistrata is a tale that centers around an Athenian woman named Lysistrata and her comrades who have taken control of the Acropolis in Athens. They are protesting against the endless wars that men are fighting and refuse their husbands sex unless they cease their battles. This revolutionary due to the views of women at the time and how little dominance women had. The woman faced a

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    Poets Wilfred Owen and Kenneth Slessor both explore war conflict‚ while also exploring the dehumanisation of soldiers and emphasising that no where it safe during the war. Owen portrays the men to be “cringe[d] in holes” with “forgotten dreams” dis-empowering the soldiers and making them less of men or perhaps applying sympathy on them. Additionally‚ Owen similarly utilises inclusive language like‚ “we turn back on our dying” to further show and imply empathy to the soldiers for the suffering they

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    Shakespeare has used the opening scene as the dramatic device to draw the audience in and get them sitting on the edge of their seat. Furthermore‚ the witches give us the sight of what may be to come “When the battle is lost and won.” It says that every battle is lost by one side and won by another. Macbeth’s fate is that he will win the physical battle‚ but will lose his victory for the battle of his soul. The riddle the witches talk in confuses us. It seems to resemble a nursery rhyme –rhyming

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    Poetic Devices Walt Whitman: Parallel Structure – In “I Hear America Singing” lines 2-8 are the best examples of Parallel Structure. Those of mechanics‚ each one singing his as it should be blithe and strong‚ The carpenter singing his as he measures his plank or beam‚ The mason singing his as he makes ready for work‚ or leaves off work‚ The boatman singing what belongs to him in his boat‚ the deckhand singing on the steamboat deck‚ The shoemaker singing as he sits on his bench‚ the hatter

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