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    Metaphor criticism would be my rhetorical method of choose. I selected metaphor criticism after reading the prompt above and saw an abundance of metaphors such as “stunning glimpse”, “dizzying height” and “journey to the top” just to name a few. A metaphor within the paragraph that stood out is “journey to top.” The tenor would be “journey” and the vehicle is the “top” I thought metaphorical about each leg of the Arch from a historical perspective. As a black man, the racial history that my people

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    “Doodle was just about the craziest brother a boy ever had.” Page 1 paragraph 2 Doodle was an ordinary boy with something special that not everybody had- a heart condition. It prevented him from doing most things an average boy could. Doodle and his brother would spend most of their time at Old Woman Swamp or outdoors. They are always together in some way. The author of “The Scarlet Ibis” uses foreshadowing, similes, and imagery to show that others expectations of one can impact themselves and take

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    that of his narrator Fredric Henry. At the beginning of Chapter Twenty-One, death and destruction is mentioned only before a one-sided conversation with a British major that leaves Henry bored. This passage also portrays Hemingway’s dark but witty style through his discursive and wistful tone, varied figures of speech, and repetitive and violent diction to indicate the uncertainty of his narrator’s situation. Hemingway’s tone, displayed by Henry’s lack of focus and wistful remarks on past events,

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    Imagery, particularly when describing beautiful colors before Gilead and contrasting them with the dull colors described in Gilead reveal how drastically life has changed. Offred mentions that in the past when she took her daughter to get ice cream, everything was “colored so delicately, pale orange, pale green, pale pink” and that her daughter, dressed in similar “ice cream pastels” would choose her treat “by the color” (Atwood 165). In life before Gilead, colors were vivid and cheerful, something

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    Solzhenitsyn’s One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich utilizes an authentic narrative told through a modest authorial voice to show the reader what life is like in a Soviet labor camp in the harsh winter of 1951. In this book, space and language converged in an austere union that rendered time the most defining theme, and yet also utterly meaningless. Language is the unifying force that retains the characters’ humanity, yet ironically also stripping them of it in certain contexts. Space is conveyed

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    People read countless stories that have a variety of themes in them. When people read “Angela's Ashes” by Frank McCourt, and “The Street” by Ann Petry, they can probably sense that there is something similar among the two stories', and that's because they share a common theme. The theme is how people can persevere through problems that they encounter. The reader will discover this similar theme of persevering through problems with the way the authors utilize the character of characters feelings and

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    Whether it be a result of the re-education or just coming of age, the Narrator in the novel Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress by Dai Sijie develops monumentally. In this passage, The Narrator was caught retelling the tailor a story he had read. However, the headman put forth a proposition. If Luo (the Narrator’s friend) can fix his tooth, he will not report the Narrator to the Security Office. The headman is both respected and feared yet in reality, he is quite vulnerable. This is proven during

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    In For That He Looked Not upon Her, George Gascoigne uses several literary devices to bring his poem together in a way that makes the point of it clear. He also uses these devices to show the deeper meaning behind his words. Of many, three of the devices used prominently throughout his work is form, diction, and imagery. All pulled together the author is able to clearly portray a betrayed tone towards the subject of the poem. An example of the diction in his writing is use of word

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    This Way for the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen by Tadeusz Borowski, published in 1959, is a short story about a concentration camp prisoner's experience working on Canada, the group of inmates responsible for helping unload the incoming prisoner transports. The narrator bares witness to many atrocities throughout the story, which are made more impactful to the reader through Borowski’s use of impactful dialogue, figurative language, casual and matter-of-fact tone, and repetition. These literary elements

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    his narrator Fredric Henry. At the beginning of Chapter Twenty-One, death and destruction is mentioned briefly only before a one-sided conversation with a snooty British major that leaves Henry bored. This passage portrays Hemingway’s dark but witty style through his discursive and wistful tone, varied figures of speech, and repetitive and violent diction to indicate the limbo war places soldiers in. Hemingway’s tone, displayed by Henry’s lack of focus and wistful remarks on past events, mirrors the

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