As it is with any good text, Gloria Anzaldua’s “How to Tame a Wild Tongue” employs several rhetorical modes, sometimes simultaneously. Each excerpt can be broken down to reveal the rhetorical modes in each one. Her first excerpt opens with a personal tale from her childhood. This is an example of narrative writing.…
The book, The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd opens with a fourteen year old white girl, Lily Owens. She lives in Sylvan, South Carolina with her abusive father T. Ray and her housemaid, Rosaleen. Lily was only four years old when her mother died. She heard that it was because of her as well, and this is the only memory she has of her. The only physical items from her mother she had were a pair of gloves and a picture of a black Mary.…
The Okefenokee Swamp After analyzing the two passages, it is clear through distinctive writing style that the purpose of each piece is quite opposite. When juxtaposed, the diversity between each passage, regarding diction and use of rhetorical terms, reveal that as one is written to educate their reader, the second is designed to entertain the reader and divulge the truth of what lurks in the Okefenokee Swamp. Passage one is written solely for educational purposes, adopting a nuetral tone, arousing no emotional connection from the reader. The opening sentence gives us a glimpse of emotionless text which is yet to come, beginning with quantitative data of the “saucer-shaped” swamp.…
In quotation number 3, Johnathan Edwards explains his ideas through [Sinners In the Hands of an Angry God]. What he is explaining is that godś bow is always on you no matter inocent or guilty. He is always watchinhg, ready to strike at any mistake. To ensure that juctice pervails he is ready to ¨shoot¨ his arrow at any sinner. Johnathan edwards explains how strong godś wrath is ¨but the meer Pleasure of God, and that of an angry god, without any promise or obligation at all that¨ (Edwards).…
Many authors believe that they creative unique stories, incomparable to any other stories written, and while they may not be verbatim, most stories actually have a common theme that connects them. Charles W. Chesnutt and Sarah Orne Jewett demonstrate a common theme buried amongst a story that differs in numerous ways from other tales in their short stories “The Goophered Grapevine” and “A White Heron,” respectively. While the differences between the two stories may be more obvious, the theme of regionalism connects the author’s pieces to display the desire for a simpler time. Subsequently, the stereotypical natures of the characters may seem to be evidence for the pieces being different, however, these natures aid in depicting the shared…
Christopher Hartshorn Ramirez Honors English 1 Poe Rhetorical Analysis Essay 9/30/15 Rhetorical Analysis In Griswold’s biography of Edgar Allen Poe, there are many rhetorical appeals used to make the reader believe in Griswold’s statements. Griswold used ethos and pathos often, using little logos.…
The interlopers and The story of an hour. B. Thesis Statement (2.) Both stories contain aspects of irony and foreshadowing as well as wonderful use of Suspense. Using this essay you can see for yourself the similarites and diffrences found in the two stories as they use these liteary techniques. II…
Edgar Allen Poe is famous for his poems and short stories; particularly his dark, mysterious horror stories. What makes his stories so chilling, captivating, and powerful is his technique of using irony. In “The Cask of Amontillado”, various kinds of irony are on display from beginning to end in this illusive tale through the characters, Montresor and Fortunato. Poe emphasizes on three different types of irony in this story to heighten the reader’s engagement: verbal, dramatic, and situational irony. Beginning with verbal irony, it is clear throughout the story that Poe utilizes this irony to communicate one facet, but mean another.…
Edgar Allan Poe is one of the most well-known Gothic writers of all time, and also a master of suspense. One tool he used in his writing is foreshadowing, which is a very prominent literary device in Poe’s writings. Some of these writings include The Cask of Amontillado, The Masque of The Red Death, and The Black Cat, in which readers are left wondering, “What happens next?” Whether he is using entire paragraphs to describe a character’s necessity for revenge, or leaving subtle hints in character’s names, many of his stories leave trails up until the very end. These trails leave the reader with a yearning to find out more and have the excitement in their stomachs tamed.…
In both of Edgar Allan Poe’s terrifying short stories, “The Tell-Tale Heart” and “The Cask of Amontillado” a murder is described in the eyes of the perpetrator. In “The Tell-Tale Heart” the murderer kills an old man because he believed that the old man’s milky eye was evil, whereas in “The Cask of Amontillado” a murderer kills a man who had previously insulted him. Edgar Allan Poe utilizes the narrator’s disturbing point of view and the cynical tone to entertain the reader with a suspenseful and horrific story. To begin with, Edgar Allan Poe describes the murder in each of the short stories through the unreliable point of view of the perpetrator which gives insight of their twisted perspective enhancing the suspense of the story. When the narrator in “The Tell Tale Heart” enters the old man’s room to kill him, the narrator describes how, “but even yet I refrained and kept…
Stories exists since the beginning of humanity, and it become a way to communicate, inform, and entertain, being adapted to the new ways to send messages, from the oral story telling to Kindle. Although there are no identical stories, there’s something called ´´ Compare and Contrast`` , which consists in trying to find the similarities and differences between two different literary works. On that case´´ The Cask of Amontillado``, written by Edgar Allan Poe, which tells the story of Montresor and his enemy Fortunato, who had humiliated Montresor, wanting revenge, and ´´ The Most Dangerous Game``, story of a sailor who finds himself in a island, and is received by General Zaroff, a hunter who kills humans. written by Richard Connell.…
The hate and bitterness of his “snarl” is the final implication as to how the Misfit feels about religion (O’Connor 645). Bellamy insists that the reason for the devilish message in the Misfit’s speech is due to his mission to play to role of the Anti-Christ. Bellamy asserts that, “The central message of the Misfit’s sermon, for a sermon is what his remarks amount to, is a familiar one in Flannery O’Connor’s fiction; there is no middle ground between absolute belief in Christ’s messianic fiction and a belief that like is nasty, brutish, and short,” (200). Katherine Feeley notes that the Misfit “embodies all reason and no faith,” which is the opposite of the faith-based personality of the grandmother (202). As Madison Jones remarks, the Misfit “may be haunted, at times tormented, by vision of Christ raising the dead, but he cannot believe it: he was not there.…
Suspenseful Techniques of “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” Ambrose Bierce is widely known for his ability to establish suspense in his infamous short story “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge”. In this literary work Bierce uses a variety of techniques that build up its suspense. These techniques catch the attention of the reader and keeps them intrigued. Bierce’s use of imagery, nonlinear plot, and point of view in “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” contribute to the suspense of the story.…
Edgar Allan Poe faced many trials and tribulation throughout his horrific life. Poe’s despair-filled life seemed to be a piece of Gothic literature brought to reality. These life experiences lead Poe to be one of the world’s greatest Gothic writers, and produce several well-known Gothic stories. Poe’s works contain many Gothic elements like fear, gloom, death, the supernatural, and horror, as well as several romantic characteristics, such as high emotions, nature and a focus on individuality. The short stories “The Tell-Tale Heart” and “The Fall of the House of Usher” by Edgar Allan Poe contain many of these elements, and in this paper I will analyze why these are classified as Gothic stories.…
It is widely believed that human beings cannot escape death. Virginia Woolf’s narration in the story “The Death of the Moth” displays the battle between life and death, which is never won. The writer employs rhetorical devices such as fragmentation and tone, as well as metaphors to deliver his message and advance the feeling of pity in the reader. In addition, Woolf attentively uses metaphors and other literary devices in a manner that agrees with the shifting of the tone all through the narration, which assert the ideology that victory in the battle of death is impossible. The author intends to show that the moth’s actions are reflective of human life and that nature is powerful.…