Plastic: A Toxic Love Story" and "A Dirge" are these two stories really so different, or are they really speaking of the same thing in a different manor. Both of the stories have the same theme, but the reader must pay attention or the reader will not be able to figure that out. The setting and the tone both give information and clues as to what the theme is though. Theme is the main idea of the story, or what it is about. The theme of "Plastic: A Toxic Love Story" is to clean up the environment because it is killing the earth. By cleaning the Earth's oceans people believe that it will help the environment and end up helping the planet. The theme of "A Dirge" is that the planet it suffering and dying. What is the setting of both of the stories
though? The setting of the stories are different, but they are somehow the same. The poem "A Dirge" is based in 1824 considering the entire planet as dying. However, in the story "Plastic: A Toxic Love Story" the setting is in present time and the beaches. Their is a similarity in both of them though because the stories are both set on the planet and how the people are killing it. What is the tone in both of the stories though? Tone is how the story sounds or seems by the emotion it expresses. The poem "A Dirge" has a sad tone of how the planet is suffering. It is almost as if the author wants us to feel bad for what we are doing to it. In the story "Plastic: A Toxic Love story" the tone also is sad and how the people should help the plant and place that the people live. Both of the stories are trying to make the people feel bad for what we are doing to the planet. So, what are the people going to do about it? So, are these stories really so different. Both of their themes speak of cleaning up the environment and trying to help Earth. Also the setting may be in different time periods, but they are not so different. The planet is still slowly dying and begging to the be assisted and saved by the ones who are killing it. The tone speaks of how sad it is that the people who live on Earth and love the planet's resources are also killing. So, the stories aren't so different, but are the people still gonna kill the planet or help save what they have already destroyed?
One example of the theme occurs when the author first introduces the story. “But the summer I was 9 years old, the town I had always loved morphed into a beautifully heartbreaking and complicated place.” (pg. 1). The author is saying that the year she turned nine, she found out something about her town that broke her heart and changed the way she saw it. This quote is important because it supports the theme. It shows that now she is older she has learned something about her town that made her wiser than when she was younger. She is now more informed because the new information changed her and caused her to begin to mature.
This does not make up for the lack of other poetic elements, and the simplicity of the writing. The differences between the two pieces is still very vass. The two pieces have two totally different objectives, which makes them have different writing styles. Claire Dederer writes “Song lyrics do a fine imitation of poetry, but they’re not quite the same thing. Lyrics are a vessel, designed to hold a singer’s voice.
Although both poems are set in the same environment, and that the visual structure of the poems are similar. Once you look deeper and analysis the poems it becomes clear that they have been written in very different styles, and very different but as powerful emotions running through them i.e. grief and resignment. One poet has a future to look forward to; the other knows that death is around the corner. One poet could not have for scene a death, the other is questioning weather the ‘black diamond dust’ was worth it on reflection.
Theme is the subject of talk, a topic, or morals that the author is trying to get readers to comprehend. When reading an excerpt, the theme is not directly stated in the text, so you must dig deeper into the context to understand the matter trying to be portrayed. In both Angela's Ashes and The Street, we can distinguish a like theme of struggling through life’s complications. After reading the two different stories, we could select the theme from using character, events, and the setting.
Both authors use figurative language to help develop sensory details. In the poem It states, “And I sunned it with my smiles, And with soft deceitful wiles.” As the author explains how the character is feeling, the reader can create a specific image in there head based on the details that is given throughout the poem. Specifically this piece of evidence shows the narrator growing more angry and having more rage. In the short story ” it states, “We are below the river's bed. The drops of moisture trickle among bones.” From this piece of text evidence the reader can sense the cold dark emotion that is trying to be formed. Also this excerpt shows the conflict that is about to become and the revenge that is about to take place. By the story and the poem using sensory details, they both share many comparisons.
A theme is a unifying or dominant idea in a literary work. Steinbeck described the competition of good versus evil as the story of mankind itself. He believes that every generation to come since Adam and Eve will now be immersed with the struggle of good and evil due to Eve’s curiosity that led to sin, eventually banning both her and Adam from the Garden of Eden. In East of Eden, Steinbeck makes the contest of good versus evil apparent through his contrasting description of the setting, the characters’ opposing personalities, and society’s changing morals.
The theme in a story is the message or big idea that the author is trying to reveal in his or her narrative. If there was no underlining theme in Sherman Alexie’s short story, “This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix, Arizona” then readers would have no interest in reading the fictional story. Understanding the message that Alexie is trying to display to his readers can vary in many ways and depends on the reader 's understanding of the story. Strong themes that are presented in the fictional tale are man versus self conflict, family, and tribal identity. Victor is a tribal member that has had a rough life and has to deal with his father passing away. Not only does he have to come to terms with his father 's death, but he also has to face his
Theme is defined as the subject of a talk, a piece of writing, a person’s thoughts, or an exhibition; a topic. Throughout literary history, authors have been using theme to bring a story together and make a point. In order to make a story have a resounding feeling in readers, authors use themes to leave an underlying message which are usually lessons and morals that should be widely taught, such as in children’s books or in fables. In all three stories, “A Rose for Emily”, “Hills like White Elephants”, and “Harrison Bergeron” the author’s use a mutual theme of death and further show how death brings change to each of the main character’s lives in different
The two passages have similar settings, even though they are not talking about the same place, they both occur outside. "A Dirge" states that the tone of this short story is exciting, because of the punctuation. Although Plastic: A Toxic Love Story sounds like a concerned passage. The theme of both passages is polluting water with plastic.
...rves the way for the plot, the theme is the central idea around which a literary piece revolves. Without the theme the plot would be meaningless and there would be nothing for the readers to derive from the literary piece. Without the plot, the theme would be meaningless as there would be nowhere to consign the message the writer intends to give the reader. It can be said that the plot and theme are the two most important literary elements of a literary piece and are inter-dependant.
Theme is the underlying power beneath a story; the “force” that makes the whole experience worthwhile. Theme is “an idea or message that the writer wishes to convey” (Holt 874). A theme can be either stated or implied. A stated theme is a theme “that the other expresses directly in his work (protic.net); an implied theme is a theme “that is not directly stated in the work” (protic.net). As mentioned before, both of these stories have an implied theme, which now is revealed to mean that the author of the story insinuated it. Themes exist in all stories (verbal or written) and can be long, short, true or false. “Earth people will beat out any other intelligent life-form in any and all competitions” is a theme, but “good always beats evil” is one too. “Once upon a time . . .” stories have themes too, except they are more one-dimensional. For example,...
The popular teen movie “Mean Girls” accurately portrays several concepts from Chapter Two including Interaction Appearance Theory and Undue Influence, just to name a few that allow teen viewers to see the type of communication there is or will be in high school. Through the interactions with her new peers, Cady Heron is able to communicate and experience several of the concepts learned in Chapter Two thanks to the interactions she had with the deceiving Regina George.
Theme plays a very important part in this short story. Theme is the idea of a literary work abstracted from its details of language, character and action. The great example of theme that is evident throughout the entire short story is the duty to perform certain acts. We can see here that the Irishman Donovan is very big on obeying his duty to carry out orders that have been authorized to him.
To me these had to be the main differences between them. Kurt Vonnegut did a very good job at showing the themes in these stories. They were very well drawn out and displayed all throughout them. Citation: Harris, Laurie Lanzen.
Although these two texts have different settings the main point is the same. Plastic: A Toxic Love Story takes place at a very popular beach while "A Dirge" doesn't have an exact setting, but the author portrays how sad the world really is by saying a "sad storm whose tears are vain" where her poem takes place. In the poem "A Dirge" the writer refers to his setting as the whole entire world not just one specific place, and although Friekel has an exact setting, one that is "a magnet for ocean-borne plastic debris," she also looks at the world as a whole. Both authors share a sadness a remorse for the way their similar setting is impacted by humans.