In the story, “Marigolds”, the author, Eugenia Collier uses imagery, diction and connotation in deep way. One example is of connotation is “... how thick were the bars of our cage”. This gives a negative connotation because it's pointing out how big their poverty is. An example for imagery is “running together and combining like fresh water color painting in the rain”. This shows how she and her friends would run around and play together.
His writing is simple and direct, which makes the events he describes all the more scary as he successfully gets his point across. His tone is very gloomy and reflective, which reflects the seriousness of the story. He also uses symbolism and metaphor to get his message across, such as the image of darkness representing the evil and brutality of the Nazis. "I had ceased to pray. How I sympathized with Job!
In the book, the language used could really strike the reader and truly show the misery they experienced. “The morning was cold and wet. They had not slept during the night, not even for a few moments, and all three of them were feeling the tension as they moved across the field toward the river.” ( O’Brien, p.105) The author uses imagery to show first hand what the soldiers encountered on that wet rainy day.
10.) Jaycee uses a lot of figurative language throughout the novel especially, when she is describing her abduction and having sex with Philip. “I hear the crackling sound and I feel paralyzed” (Dugard 9). She uses onomatopoeia to mimic the sound of the stun gun to enrich her text. The effect of her using figurative language is the reader better understands what is happening.
Australian author, Tim Winton (named a Living Treasure by the National Trust in 2007) has won numerous literary awards for his, children's books, non-fiction books, and short stories. Winton creates a connection between his book and his audience in a very spectacular manner as he creates a real feeling and attachment between the audience and his books. The three techniques that Winton uses within his stories is to make a theme, create a character for each person and then make a setting for the story. The key messages behind these three stories (On Her Knees, Sand and Immunity), each different however they all connect to the target audience and force them to think about their own life. ‘On Her Knees’ sends a message saying to never give up and keep your dignity.
Kelley’s diction adds a tone to the piece and allows her to get her message across with helping the reader understand more deeply . Kelley’s use of imagery, appeal to logic,
Throughout his experience in the civil war of Sierra Leone, Beah was alone. He emphasizes intensity in silence to communicate a feeling of abandonment and a lack of mental, physical, and emotional support. Students must think critically to completely interpret the author’s literal and metaphorical use of imagery. Likewise, Beah spends a large portion of his struggle in the African Jungle.
In The Marrow Thieves, diction is used to illustrate the resilience of characters, even when they are faced with violent oppression. For instance, when Minerva was taken away by the recruiters and sent to a residential school so they could ‘sample’ her dream
A Mother’s Testimonial about her Change: an interview with Orleanna by a literary critic Preamble: I started from the premise that The Poisonwood Bible is a bestselling autobiography in which Orleanna describes her experiences in the Congo. Hello Orleanna. I am ¬_____, a literary critic and it’s my pleasure to have you today. We all know you wrote the autobiography The Poisonwood Bible.
In The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls, Rose Mary is the mother of the Walls children who often does not act as a true adult. Rose Mary’s attitudes and behaviours are childlike, and therefore her children must take on responsibility for the lack her own. Rose Mary ignores her obligations as a parent and chooses an irresponsible way of life which endangers her children. Rose Mary has never properly matured into adulthood due to her lack of financial stability, bliss ignorance and optimism, and her selfishness nature.
The author makes a point of incorporating inclusive diction in her piece as well which also helps strengthen the bond the reader feels with the author. It is much closer and intimate of an exchange that maters specifically to us and here’s why. This style is very effective and draws in a wider
such as her use of detailed imagery when describing how she resembled a wriggling beetle to put a comical image in the reader's mind. Her use of positive diction to make light of her serious situation, and her different uses of tone, help educate her readers about the difficulties of living with a
Sleep just isn’t sleep anymore. It’s an escape… The horizon was a burning candle. “The village was now enveloped in (crescendo of the germinating) flames, engulfing the crumbling buildings, spreading its boiling rage through everything in its way. The inferno, like a rapacious wild creature refusing to be tamed, grew more and more wild by the second. The dizzying radiant heat from the inferno pulled everything within reach deeper into the burning abyss.
Listen to me without pity. I cannot use your pity.” , the use of repetition is effective in creating empathy towards her situation instead of pity. Through the use of figurative language like rhetorical questions, metaphors, imagery and repetition, the author is able to convey a vivid sense of what living in poverty is really like. This is intended to make the reader feel empathy towards those who are poor.
Malaria is the most common disease in third world countries with a tropical climate; the disease is caused by a parasite called Plasmodium, which is transmitted through the bites of infected mosquitoes. In the human body, the parasites multiply in the liver, and then infect red blood cells. Symptoms of malaria include fever, headache, and vomiting, and usually appear between 10 and 15 days after the mosquito bite. If not treated, malaria can quickly become life-threatening by disrupting the blood supply to vital organs. In many parts of the world, the parasites have developed resistance to a number of malaria medicines.