Preview

Backfire in Langston Hughes "Salvation"

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
885 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Backfire in Langston Hughes "Salvation"
Backfire There are three types of irony. Verbal, situational, and dramatic irony. The two types of irony used in Langston Hughes’ first person narrative “Salvation” is verbal and situational irony. Verbal irony is the use of words to mean something different from what a person actually says. Situational irony occurs when the exact opposite of what is meant to happen, happens. Theses two types irony are introduced by Hughes’ Auntie Reed who begins to take Hughes to church for several weeks, and then talks about taking Hughes to the children revival. This sets up the beginning of Hughes traumatic experience with religion. The narrative begins with, “I was saved from sin when I was going on thirteen. But not really saved.” This beginning sentence contains the start of irony, because this sentence contradicts itself by saying that he was saved, but not really saved. This makes the reader to really question the rest of the story, because the narrative is called “Salvation”. Hughes’ Aunt also establishes an expectation of him to get saved and to see Jesus, which is a very important sentence for the rest of the piece.
“My aunt told me...from then on!” Hughes takes this statement very literal, in which he believes that Jesus will come down, and save him from sin in a physical manner. He does not know any better, so he listens to the elders about their experience when they saw Jesus, and take those experiences literally too. This misunderstanding Hughes has about Jesus will create the base of the irony later in the narrative.
The third, fourth, eighth, ninth, and tenth paragraph of “Salvation” is set around the idea of guilt in which the preacher sings songs that will emotionally sway the children to be “saved”. “One little lamb was left out in the cold.” This forces the children to think of being left behind, and at this age, they do not like to be alone, or to be stranded with no one, and so they go to the preacher so they are not left behind. Another factor that

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the story Camp Harmony, by Monica Sone, the author uses irony in her story in many ways. First off, the title of the story is called Camp Harmony, and the camp itself is not a very happy or beautiful place. We see this when the author writes,¨It must have rained hard the night before in Puyallup, for we sank ankle deep in gray, glutinous mud¨ and ¨They're the only beautiful things around here¨, referring to dandelions. This show irony because the camp is actually a dull place and it has a cheerful name.…

    • 94 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The third example of irony is how Ann comes to realize how John was the only man for her. It took her having sex with Steven for her to grasp it was John she loved not Steven. This is ironic for the reason that in the beginning of this short story Ann kept complaining about John's looks and way of doing things, and complimenting on how different Steven not only looked but acted. With time it turns out that in the conclusion Ann is not able to be with John because of her decision to sleep with Steven.…

    • 532 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Irony, in literature can be anything from sarcasm to a shocking plot twist that can be inconvenient to the characters toward the end. A type of irony is situational which is where something very unexpected shows up at the last minute making the outcome of the story completely different then you expected. Such as the one in Lord of the Flies that effects one special character named Simon, and really almost all the characters.…

    • 294 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Writing Exercise #2 The essay ‘Salvation” by Langston Hughes was the essay I connected with most. The religious aspect if it enticed me to read further. To me it was ironic that Hughes titled the essay “Salvation” when in fact it seemed young 12-year-old Hughes had become more lost than before going to the revival. I feel as if that Hughes wanted readers to take an important theme away from the essay; peer pressure from adults has a big impact on small children.…

    • 659 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Irony is undoubtedly the most significant use of a rhetorical device in the entire passage. It’s established that the entire story will be based on irony when Hughes’ contradicts himself in the first sentence saying he was saved, “But not really saved.” Another example of irony, is the preacher’s sermon. It’s meant to lead the children toward Jesus, but it’s described as “...prayers and songs swirled around me…” revealing that the sermon only confuses Hughes’ more instead of guiding him. This finally comes to a head at the last sentence where he reveals he no longer believes in Jesus “...since he didn’t come to help me,” meaning his aunt and the preacher turned him away from religion, rather than leading him to it.…

    • 585 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A young Langston finds himself trapped into obedience just because the congregation wants him to go up and get “saved”, and therefore he ventures to the altar as if he has seen the light of the Holy Spirit. The struggles he faces while trying his best to conform to familial mandates, a battle he fights within himself until there is nothing left for him but to servile makes him feel enormously bad. He finds it disappointing to everyone in the church. So, he finally gets "saved" by pretending to have seen Jesus. As a result, a feeling of guilt from lying to everyone in the church makes him unhappy.…

    • 540 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Langston Hughes efficiently uses rhetorical devices to satirize religion. The story displays religious restoration that the author attended at thirteen years old. By the second sentence, Hughes explains that he wasn't "really saved", which sets a risky tone toward religion. The dishonesty of religion is highlighted throughout the narrative both by displaying the inconsistency between the child's approach of the religious restoration and the adult’s approach. Hughes' choice of language and syntax helps to form his sarcastic and ironic tone toward religion, returning numerous times to examples of the fanfare correlated with church and the excessive reactions of those who attend.…

    • 249 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Every child has been disappointed in his or life because he or she was looking forward for something big to happen but never did happen. For example, the parents who had lied to their kids about Santa Claus who supposed to comes on Christmas Eve to dropped presents off to the good kids. Many kids are very curious of what Santa look like, so they will stay up all night and wait to see him. After the kids don’t see Santa the child will lose hope and stop believing. This is similar of what happen in the “Salvation” short story of Langston Hughes. Langston believes in his aunt when she said that when he became saved he will see Jesus and see a light. This never happen, because he misinterpreted his aunt words, he literally thought that he was…

    • 283 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    For people who are self-conscious, it is as though they are on the stage to where the audience is scrutinizing their every step and watching them, but it is all in their head. Being one’s own person is what makes people who they are. Individuals differ in other dimensions from their shoe size to their view on who will become the next president. In “Salvation” by Langston Hughes, young Langston shared how he and his peers experience pressure from their church and how differently they all deal with the situation.…

    • 765 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Langston Hughes’ essay “Salvation,” the author recounts how his failure to “see” Jesus and be outwardly saved results in a deeper, more stirring revelation: that only he---and not Jesus---can save his soul. Although Hughes devotes much of his essay to parodying the salvation experiences and apparent hypocrisy of other church members, and he tells us that the church building is stuffy, uncomfortable, hot and boring, he abruptly changes his tone at the end. When he describes how he cried in bed from guilt at having lied about his salvation, the reader realizes that Hughes has indeed undergone a powerful spiritual awakening: he has been saved from his own hypocrisy.…

    • 953 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the essay “Salvation,” Langton Hughes portrays himself as a young child who was raised to believe that our savior, Jesus Christ, would come with a bright light to be within the heart of whoever desires and believes in him. Little did the boy know that the spirit of the lord actually is felt on the inside and inside the ones heart who desires him and lets him in. That morning at church, all the stories of how the lord comes into your life were not as the little boy had been told…

    • 637 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In Langston Hughes' Salvation, Hughes illustrates himself as a little boy, who's decisions at a church one morning, reflect the human races instinctive tendency to conform and in a sense, obey. That morning in church, Hughes is indirectly pressured to go up to the altar and "be saved" by seeing the light of god.…

    • 377 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Salvation” by Langston Hughes is a narrative telling the readers about his experience as a 12 year old in church being “saved” from sin by Jesus just like his aunt and others were. His aunt said to Langston, “When you were saved you saw a light.” He believed what his aunt had said since she had been already saved. Langston remembered what his aunt told him when he was at his Auntie Reed’s church sitting on the mourner’s bench during the children’s meeting, “to bring the young lambs to the fold.”…

    • 585 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    the longest memory

    • 1177 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Ve rbal irony also emphasizes the pain and suffering on the slaves behalf. By showing a contrast in the meaning of the words used and what they communicate, such as in…

    • 1177 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Barnet, S., Burto, W., & Cain, W. E. (2011). Literature for composition. (9th ed.). Bloomington: Longman.…

    • 1323 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays

Related Topics