Indent style Essays

  • Hanging Indent: Annotated Bibliography

    944 Words  | 2 Pages

    A hanging indent is when the first line of text is flush with the left margin and the remaining lines of text are indented.  They help to separate entries that might otherwise have a tendency to run together (Firestone, 2003).  Hanging indents are most often used when creating a bibliography, or reference page.  If there are many references to enter, and the  text were just written in normal format, it would be difficult to differentiate where one entry ends and another begins.  By using hanging

  • Archetypes In Jeannee Castle's The Glass Castle

    850 Words  | 2 Pages

    An archetype, as defined by Literary Terms, is an idea, symbol, pattern, or character type that appears repeatedly in stories from cultures worldwide, symbolizing something universal in the human experience. There are three types of archetypes: symbolic, character, and situational. In her memoir, The Glass Castle, Jeannette Walls employs each archetype to capture her difficult life growing up due to her father's alcoholism and inability to hold a job. These archetypes also play a crucial role in

  • Diction In The Scarlet Letter

    1710 Words  | 4 Pages

    Diction The novel in general is written in formal language because of its complex wording and sophisticated style. Hawthorne uses imagery as well as metaphors and irony. The language is flowery at instances and plain in others. His use of diction does not indicate his social status, education or region. Dialogue makes up about half of the novel. The dialogue from character to character is a bit distinct but the language is pretty similar even little Pearls language is very sophisticated. Select

  • Sandra Cisneros 'Short Story Eleven'

    686 Words  | 2 Pages

    Sandra Cisneros’s short story “Eleven” brilliantly characterizes the immature, shy, and insightful Rachel and illustrates her rejecting attitude towards the sweater, which represents the transition from her adolescence into adulthood. Cisneros primarily uses point of view, childlike diction, and syntax to portray Rachel’s juvenile and timid character. The story opens with Rachel engaging the readers using second person point of view and expressing her outlook on age in a more factual than opinionated

  • The Giver Rhetorical Analysis Essay

    577 Words  | 2 Pages

    Lowry expresses both satire and seriousness in her style of writing. Through the use of syntax, diction, point of view and formality, Lowry conveys her attitude and opinion towards events in the novel. The narrator of the story writes from Jonas` perspective. The reader learns about the world around Jonas along with Jonas. Next, Lowry uses the narrative technique of withholding knowledge from the reader until the protagonist receives it which affects the way the reader interprets information. It

  • Dialogical and Formalistic Approach to Thomas Gray's Elegy (Eulogy) Written in a Country Churchyard

    839 Words  | 2 Pages

    consciousness that the exchange of language between the speaker and addressee occurs. (HCAL, 349) The second method is the Formalistic Approach, which allows the reader to look at a literary piece, and critique it according to its form, point of view, style, imagery, atmosphere, theme, and word choice. The formalistic views on form, allow us to look at the essential structure of the poem. "Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard" by Thomas Gray shows aspects of both Dialogical and Formalistic Approaches

  • Narration Techniques Add Interest in Charles Brockden Brown's Wieland

    1534 Words  | 4 Pages

    Narration Techniques Add Interest in Charles Brockden Brown's Wieland In today's popular horror movies, one common element is that the audience always knows what is going to happen. The main character, of course, is clueless. The girl always runs up the stairs when she should be running out the door or into the woods when she should be running to an open area. I am usually forced to yell in exasperation at the TV screen, always hoping that the girl will hear me. Somehow, she never does.

  • The True Literary Success Of Nathaniel Hawthorne: A True Classic

    702 Words  | 2 Pages

    exemplifies an author bestowed underserved popularity and success perpetuated solely by that popularity. Examining both his work and his lifestyle brings to light a dull drive for obsolete accomplishments. While his plotlines can be considered classic, his style portrays an overzealous attempt at sophistication. Hawthorne’s desire to be considered a great writer takes away from the raw content of his works, and leaves the text dry and dull. His work is no longer relevant to a broad audience, further depreciating

  • Asperger Syndrome: Christopher John Christopher Boone

    845 Words  | 2 Pages

    Christopher John Francis Boone is a teenager, who is thought to have Asperger Syndrome. Though it is not explicitly stated, he displays all symptoms. Asperger Syndrome is a high functioning branch of Autism and is becoming a more common topic in our everyday lives. I feel that I find a large amount of imagery in this novel is because I have personal experience with Asperger Syndrome, this has given me a whole new understanding of how it must feel to have this syndrome. I also had a chance to observe

  • The Powerful Use of Imagery and Metaphor in a Noiseless Patient Spider by Walt Whitman

    527 Words  | 2 Pages

    The heart of poetry is in its imagery, which leads the reader to perceive all of the senses the poet was feeling – the sights, sounds, scents, touches. A poet uses imagery to evoke these emotions in the reader to paint a mental picture – to “show” the reader the experience that inspired the poet, not just “tell” the story. In “A Noiseless Patient Spider,” Walt Whitman’s use of metaphor and powerful imagery emphasizes the speaker’s own search for soulful connectedness to the world. As written in

  • Hyena

    925 Words  | 2 Pages

    “Hyena” is a thought-provoking poem written by Edwin Morgan in the form of a dramatic monologue. Through the poem, the Hyena is portrayed as an unpleasant, calculating character. Edwin Morgan uses various techniques to help the reader understand the character of the Hyena, such as word choice, sentence structure, sound effects and imagery. The poem is written in the second person, and is narrated by the Hyena. This provides the effect of the Hyena speaking directly to the reader, or perhaps, mankind

  • College Meals

    545 Words  | 2 Pages

    writings, she describes two different dinners: one at a men’s college, and another at a women’s college. Using multiple devices, Woolf expresses her opinion of the inequality between men and women within these two passages. She also uses a narrative style to express her opinions even more throughout the passages. One of the most prominent rhetorical devices Virginia Woolf uses throughout both pieces is imagery. She uses imagery in order to make the ideas and situations become more personal. An even

  • Winning Poem Essay

    853 Words  | 2 Pages

    A poem is a work of art. It needs more than just a rhyme or a simple meaning to be great. “Abandoned Farmhouse” by Ted Kooser explains human nature by making metaphors and inferences about different objects a family of three left behind on their property after a disaster. It also works very well using descriptions to create a lucid image in the reader’s head of the message the poem is trying to convey. There are many more components that add to the poem to make it unique. Theme, alliteration, diction

  • Literary Analysis Of Mid-Term Break By Seamus Heaney

    755 Words  | 2 Pages

    Distant Grief Author Seamus Heaney, in the poem “Mid-Term Break,” gives the reader a snapshot of death, detached from any emotional perspective, using narration, imagery, and foreshadowing. This event greatly affected the young poet and he recalls to the reader his memory the events precisely to the hour, with bells dismissing classes at two o’clock, to the ambulance arriving at ten o’clock. The speaker in the poem, assumed to be the poet himself, a young college student returns home mid-semester

  • Dream Crushed in Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston

    727 Words  | 2 Pages

    What we hope for is not always what we need. This is prevalent in the novel “Their Eyes Were Watching God” by Zora Neale Hurston where the characters have his or her dream crushed for the sake of fate. This is especially true for Janie who strives throughout the novel to have her dream of “the pear tree” realized, and Hurston shows this using a variation of metaphor, imagery, and personification. Janie’s attempts at achieving her own pear tree and fails, nevertheless this is done so that she can

  • Narrative vs. Descriptive Writing

    996 Words  | 2 Pages

    Narrative vs. Descriptive There are many different types of writing styles that are used in everyday literature; in books and magazine articles, scholarly and academic journals. According to Essentials of College Writing, by C. M. Connell & K. Sole (2013), descriptive writing is “defined by painting pictures with words” (chapter 6.4, line 1), while narrative writing is described as “storytelling from the point of view of the narrator” (chapter 6.3, line 1). Narrative writing is more appealing considering

  • Cold Moon/ Long Night Moon

    1032 Words  | 3 Pages

    Corvo walked the streets of Dunwall, which was a happier place now that the plague was gone, and the Lord Regent was out of power. Corvo was looking for a man by the name of Teague. He hoped that it would be worth his time, since he was just in the middle of teaching the Empress how to defend herself before he got interrupted. Everything about meeting this man felt wrong, and even though he tried to distract himself with happier thoughts, he couldn’t help but feel a tinge of dread. Corvo let the

  • Santa Ana Winds are Meaningful to Authors Joan Didion in the Santa Ana and Linda Thomas in In Brush Fire

    792 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Santa Ana winds obviously mean a great deal to Didion and Thomas which is why they regard it as sort of a powerful force in nature. In The Santa Ana by Joan Didion, the wind is portrayed as a force that deprives people of happiness. This concept is highlighted when she states that “ to live with the Santa Anna is to accept . . . a deeply mechanistic view of human behavior.” In Brush Fire by Linda Thomas, it is portrayed more like a normal power of nature. Her concept is highlighted when she

  • Fire and Ice a Poem by Robert Frost

    591 Words  | 2 Pages

    In Robert Frost’s poem “Fire and Ice”, it presents an all out debate about the end of the world. It is clear that, through the title, the poem demonstrates the distinctions in which the world will either be engulfed in flames or covered in ice but the idea of the “lost paradise” is interpreted in a different manner. Frost’s poem is described as humorous or sardonic but there is a bit of irony in the speaker’s tone (230). Frost’s use of “natural lyrics provide a comparison with the outer scene and

  • A Call to the Task: The Attunement of Fear and Trembling

    1727 Words  | 4 Pages

    his son, he misses the full movements of philosophy and faith that the true Abraham completed. Each is closed by a brief image of a child being weaned, presumably a metaphor of the past story. Characteristically of Kierkegaard’s non-prescriptive style, we are told that these stories are the way in which a certain man has tried to understand Abraham; we are invited, but not forced, into contemplation of these various stories. There exist a wealth of connections between each Abraham narrative and