Tim O Brien Rhetorical Analysis

977 Words2 Pages

Teddy Bracken 5/22/24 Mr.Gracey American Literature The Act of Storytelling: An Invisible Therapist Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried, is an examination of several stories about the Vietnam War and how the war affected the people in it. However, what might appear as several different stories, arguable is one: the story of Tim O’Brien. Tim directly uses the first person point of view to showcase his actions, regrets and memories from Vietnam. Contrastly, O’Brien uses made-up characters in order to nakedly relive his experience in war, for the reader to view it without bias and tell a story. O’Brien also blurs lines between fiction and reality by hinting at characters that could be related to him, but hold a different name. The Things They Carried showcases how …show more content…

His use of the first person to show how writers could reflect on their actions and what they wished they could have done differently. O’Brien, by using the first person, he makes the story ‘present’ which can make a moment that much more jarring. By doing this, the writer can explore “things [they] never looked at” and “be brave.” (O’Brien 172) Through the exploration of himself, O'Brien is able to ironically take a step back from the situation and analyze pieces he missed or parts of the story that go unnoticed. O’Brien shows how storytelling makes a person reflect and take a critical view of their own life by expressing his wishes that he could have “attached faces to grief and love and pity and god.” (172) O’Brien by storytelling is making peace with the things he didn’t do because of his direct and ‘present’ viewpoint on past actions. Even though he admits that some of his stories are “made up,” O’Brien shows that the first person for writers is something that can make a person reflect because of how the POV creates a sense of

Open Document