I enjoyed how Lydia stayed calm and didn't panic through the tragic disaster she had faced. The rhetorical techniques that Brideau demonstrates are pathos because she displays positive and negative emotions throughout the story. Also tells the story through graphic details. The words “hope” and “determination” seemed most significant because it set the overall tone to the story. For example, Lydia was terrified when she realized she was unable to shut the door against the rushing water, but she was determined to get to safe spot to avoid the flooding of the hurricane. This essay does not remind me of any other essays. If I wrote a letter to Jan Brideau, I would tell her I found the essay Lydia’s Story very inspiring and informative. I admired
how she went into detail and informed the readers on how destructive that hurricane really was. I would also tell her that she did a excellent job of bringing awareness on how the hurricane affected the life's of the New Orleans people. The characteristics and features that I found most useful as a writer was the content Brideau displayed. Brideau used specific details to develop her message throughout the story. As a reader I found her writing to be very compelling, it also kept me interested and want to continue to read. I would considering adapting Brideau’s elements because it could potentially enhance my writing skills. So by incorporating Brideau's techniques into my own writing, hopefully I can influence the readers as well as she did.
The Onion’s mock press release markets a product called MagnaSoles. By formulating a mock advertisement a situation is created where The Onion can criticize modern day advertising. Furthermore, they can go as far as to highlight the lucrative statements that are made by advertisements that seduce consumers to believe in the “science” behind their product and make a purchase. The Onion uses a satirical and humorous tone compiled with made up scientific diction to highlight the manner in which consumers believe anything that is told to them and how powerful companies have become through their words whether true or false.
Creative Section Prompt: Write a scene where an “unlovable” character is involved in a surprising or unexpected hobby or appreciation for something.
In, “The Speech of Miss Polly Baker” written by Benjamin Franklin (one of the Founding Fathers) in 1747, brought up the disparities that were between men and women within the judicial system. Also, “The Speech of Miss Polly Baker” also briefly points out, how religion has been intertwined with politics. All throughout “The Speech of Miss Polly Baker,” Benjamin Franklin uses very intense diction and syntax to help support what he is trying to express to the rest of society. Also writing this speech in the view point of a women, greatly helps establish what he is trying to say. If Benjamin Franklin was to write it as a man, the speech my have not had the same passionate effect as it currently has.
“I have hated the words and I have loved them, and I hope I have made them right.” (Zusak 528) Words and the power they possess is a common theme that is heavily mentioned throughout the novel The Book Thief by Markus Zusak. Throughout this book, rhetoric affects multiple characters in both positive and negative ways. There are instances in this book in which one can see how words have the ability to tear people down, educate and inform, and to inspire individuals to follow their dreams.
The Jump-Off Creek introduces the reader to the unforgiving Blue Mountains and the harsh pioneer lifestyle with the tale of Lydia Sanderson, a widow who moves west from Pennsylvania to take up residence in a rundown homestead. She and other characters battle nature, finances, and even each other on occasion in a fight for survival in the harsh Oregon wilderness. Although the story is vividly expressed through the use of precise detail and 1800s slang, it failed to give me a reason to care because the characters are depicted as emotionally inhibited.
During the late 1800’s and early 1900’s the fight for equal and just treatment for both women and children was one of the most historically prominent movements in America. Courageous women everywhere fought, protested and petitioned with the hope that they would achieve equal rights and better treatment for all, especially children. One of these women is known as Florence Kelley. On July 22, 1905, Kelley made her mark on the nation when she delivered a speech before the National American Woman Suffrage Association, raising awareness of the cruel truth of the severity behind child labor through the use of repetition, imagery and oxymorons.
Lydia did not hide what happened during Hurricane Katrina, she shared her story with others. “But it’s Lydia’s story that stays with me most, probably because it represents the essence of hope and determination in the face of terrible adversity.” (p.131) This quote made me realize how significant the impact of sharing has on people who weren’t even victims of Hurricane Katrina. I feel like Lydia showed a tremendous amount of courage that not many people could have done.
I chose this word because the tone of the first chapter seems rather dark. We hear stories of the hopes with which the Puritans arrived in the new world; however, these hopes quickly turned dark because the Purtains found that the first buildings they needed to create were a prison, which alludes to the sins they committed; and a cemetery, which contradicts the new life they hoped to create for themselves.
I really admire the phrases author used to describe the feelings , emotions , visions and thoughts of that woman .
It was not until 1919 that women had the right to vote. If it was not for the hard work, determination, and perseverance from Elizabeth Cady Stanton, women today still may not of had the privilege to vote. Because of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and her hard work, women are now treated equally in our society today.
It is safe to say that the box next to the “boring, monotone, never-ending lecture” has been checked off more than once. Without the use of rhetorical strategies, the world would be left with nothing but boring, uniform literature. This would leave readers feeling the same way one does after a bad lecture. Rhetorical devices not only open one’s imagination but also allows a reader to dig deep into a piece and come out with a better understanding of the author’s intentions. Ursula K. Le Guin’s “The Wife’s Story” is about a family that is going through a tough spot. However, though diction, imagery, pathos, and foreshadowing Guin reveals a deep truth about this family that the reader does not see coming.
In the short story “The Scarlet Ibis,” Hurst’s use of somber diction and regretful imagery conveys a solemn tone and reveals that there are limits to everything in life that should not be pushed too far.
The next rhetorical device used is imagery, through imagery in All the King’s Men, Warren outlines how the ramifications of actions will inevitably come back to haunt the person who takes action.The first example of imagery Warren uses is, “For the truth is a terrible thing. You dabble your foot in it and it is nothing. But you walk a little farther and you feel it pull you like an undertow or a whirlpool. First there is the slow pull so steady and gradual you scarcely notice it, then the acceleration, then the dizzy whirl and plunge to blackness. For there is a blackness of truth, too”(Warren 445). In this excerpt, Jack feels stressed because he has come to understand the real impact his actions have had on others. Truth is a terrible thing
In this scene Katniss is at the annual reaping which is an event that take place in every district before each Hunger Games. This is where they choose the tributes that are going to be in that years Games. To qualify for the reaping one must be at least 12.
In The Tale of Sir Thopas, Geoffrey Chaucer personifies and idealizes the wonder of Nature, allowing her innate sense of mystery to shine through, much like the sun seeping into a meadow discovered. Chaucer’s therapeutic landscape allows the young hero to find an inner sense of well being, manifesting clearly his desires for the first time. Ergo, Nature grants Thopas access to a secret part of himself, and in turn, the knight consciously desires to love Nature. This desire comes to fruition as he sets his sights on the Elf-Queen, a fairy Goddess who personifies the natural world around him. By placing Nature in this deity-like state above Man, Chaucer cleverly uses the pastoral tones of the story to celebrate the continuity of the natural