Social Commentary Essay

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    Social Commentary is the act of using rhetorical means to provide commentary on issues in a society. This basically means that it is the act of using a certain style of talking or writing to provide explanation for problems in a society. It’s often done by soliciting to a change after telling of a problem and trying to appeal to the people’s sense of justice. This doesn’t refer to Political Commentary, where one critiques specifically to politics. They can relate, but Social Commentary refers to

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    that the author uses reveals what the social commentary is to the readers. Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451, Ally Condie’s Matched, and Wes Ball’s Maze Runner: Scorch Trials, all demonstrate a dystopia where people within the book are controlled to live a life that’s not theirs. The stylistic methods that both authors use to provide a way to warn their readers about what might happen in the future, a future that reflects their behavior. Part 1: The Social Commentary and Style within Fahrenheit 451 In

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    Social Commentary in Chopin's The Story of an Hour IN "The Story of an Hour," Kate Chopin tells the tale of a woman who learns of her husband's untimely death, seeks solitude in which she proceeds to reflect upon this incident and its implications, has a life-altering/-giving epiphany, and proceeds to have all of the fresh hope and elation that had accompanied this experience dashed when her supposedly dead husband appears alive and well at her door, thereby inducing her sudden death. Read

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    Social Commentary in Black Mirror Nosedive The TV show, Black Mirror, changes aspects of our reality to exarate our societal norms. For example, the episode Nosedive, execrates our use of social media to the point that a person can ruin their life with just a few bad social interactions. Black Mirror--and Nosedive in particular--comments on different parts of our global society through this exaggeration. Season three, episode one, Nosedive, takes an extreme approach to social media. No longer confined

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    overcontrolled society. These literary works have detailed imagery and great use of diction while also emphasizing the dark society to show the readers that the people think their society is perfect but it is actually the opposite. Part 1: The Social Commentary and Style within Fahrenheit 451 First off, an example of dystopian literature is Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451. In the novel, Bradbury illustrates a society without the freedom of intellectual thinking from literature and replaces it with artificial

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    Social Commentary in Henry Tilney’s Dialogue In the selected passage of Northanger Abbey, Jane Austen criticizes the trivialization of women, and novelists, at the turn of the 19th century. Henry Tilney’s ostentatious dialogue, Austen’s parody of the Gothic, and the layered style of the the text converge to form Austen’s commentary. Syntax is the most obvious tool used in this passage. Catherine’s only line is short and noncommittal. Aside from a single exclamation, Tilney’s dialogue consists

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    Saving Private Ryan begins with a depiction of D-Day during World War II. I was utterly shocked that this was chosen as the opening scene, but I found it entrancing. This scene was the most realistic and raw war depictions that I have ever seen in a film. It is difficult for the movie industry to create scenes that are as gory as the one at the beginning of Saving Private Ryan, but I feel that this was one of the greatest aspects of the film. I was blown away by the harsh reality that this movie

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    Dickens' Social Commentary in Great Expectations               Charles Dickens' Great Expectations stands as one of the most highly revered works in all of English literature. The novel's perennial appeal lies in its penetrating depictions of character, rich panoramas of social milieu, and implicit crusades against social evils.1 Dickens used the growth of his characters in Great Expectations, particularly Pip, in relation to others to write about social reform, and most effectively illustrated

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    to Canterbury. Ranging from knights to aristocrats to the trade class , the descriptive passages depict his opinions on each traveller. These characters in turn reflect Chaucer’s criticism and attitude towards medieval society, an example of social commentary. One character specifically used to reflect Chaucer's views on Scottish culture, the lower class, and corrupt businessmen is the Miler. In the general prologue, Chaucer reveals an overall negative opinion towards the Miller’s appearance and

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    In the Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald uses social commentary to show what the people of the time period were like. It is set in an upper class area of old and newly made wealthy people. Although the book was set during the Jazz Age of the 1920s, it parallels the people of the 21st century and shows the peoples low morals, their individual pursuit of the American dream, and how they embrace noblesse oblige. In the book, the characters were rarely ever real when they would attend parties at Jay Gatsby’s

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