Composers in everyday situations use distinctively visuals through the use of elaborate techniques and complex word choice to bring the world of their work to life through the images they create. These visuals are vivid and very clear; so it helps the responder visualise the text and therefore relate to the texts and also deepens their understanding of the short stories. Two short stories composed by Henry Lawson that employ techniques and word choice to portray distinctively visuals is ‘The Drover’s Wife’ and ‘In a Dry Season’; these two texts are strongly opposite to the visual “Little Miss Sunshine”, a picture book by Roger Hargreaves. Lawson and Hargreaves give their audience a feeling of the distinctly visual. Both authors convey distinctive experiences through different ways.…
Distinctively visual texts are often used by composers to evoke a reality through the use of figurative language and other language devices, as it allows them to create an image in their mind and transport them to their imagined landscape. This is especially shown through Henry Lawson’s both tragic and comic short stories, ‘The Drover’s Wife’ and ‘The Loaded Dog’, with his exceptional use of dramatic verbs and juxtaposition and other literary techniques.…
Goldsworthy conveys distinctively visual images in the readers mind by use of descriptive language. With use of the quote describing, ‘The Swan’, a bar in the novel, Goldsworthy says ,” a warren of crumbly weatherboard overgrown bougainvillea. Was packed, the drinkers and their noise spilling out of the front bar into the garden.” Goldsworthy’s extensive use of descriptive…
“A peanut-brown boy with curly hair, he seemed to know everything,” (McPherson 9). Comparing the color of a peanut to the skin color of a boy that the main character notes is important in contributing to McPherson’s ongoing connection between lifeless objects and the colors of everyday life. It’s this type of diction that the author uses that develops a childish tone throughout the story. Not only does the author use this connection between two different parts of speech but he also uses adjectives to develop the colorful tone of the story. “These happy children would pull and twist the long arms of billowy crepe paper into wondrous, multicolored plaits,” (McPherson 13). The main character describes his observation of the colors around the Maypole as “wondrous,” which continues to develop the tone of vibrant and youthful colorfulness throughout the story. The adjectives the author uses have a childish ambience to them, including “wondrous,” which creates a visualization of the main character as a young boy staring in awe at the colors of the Maypole. “A deep blue bandanna enclosed her head with the wonder of a summer sky. Black patent leather shoes glistened like half-hidden stars beneath the red and white of her hemline,” (McPherson 18). The author continues to portray the main character as a young man infatuated with the colors around him to amplify and extend the tone of color in the story through a childish…
Writers use imagery to unlock the reader’s memory of a specific experience. Good writers use figurative language like personification to give their writing life and to connect with their audiences. C.S. Lewis’ style of writing in The Silver Chair incorporated imagery, personification and a childs sense of imagination to convey multiple messages.…
The Lost Thing revolves around a creature whom is met with indifference by the rest of society. The bright red colour of ‘the thing’ immediately catches the reader’s eyes, drawing their attention to it thus effectively enabling reader’s to instantly explore as to why the creature is ‘lost’ within an industrialised town unlike it's natural surroundings. This creates a sense of isolation and seclusion which follows the picturesque…
In Karen Russell’s short story “St. Lucy’s …” she uses connotative language to create an alive setting or sense of place. An example of this is when she uses, “They unslatted the windows at night so that long fingers of moonlight beckoned us from the woods (230).” to describe the wolf girls wanting the moonlight and the…
3. Much of the language used to describe the narrator’s experience has both a denotative (descriptive) function and a connotative (symbolic or figurative) function. How do the meaning of such words and phrases as “yellow,” “creeping,” “immovable bed,” and “outside pattern” change as they appear in different parts of the story?…
Literary devices are used throughout literature to help readers have a better understanding. Metaphors, for example, help readers to have a better visual of different aspects. In Kurt Vonnegut’s “Harrison Bergeron,” metaphors are evident throughout the short story. The metaphors that are used throughout the short story, such as, “dancing to the ceiling,” “kissed the ceiling,” and “breaking the chains,” help readers to have a better understanding of the message in “Harrison Bergeron.”…
Irving Layton uses metaphor in his essay. 'books have become objects of curiosity; like an atomic pile, something heard about but never seen'(p145) This sentence lets people relate with the point that author is trying to get across to the reader. The reader now has a mental reference or link to what is being described so he can now better understand what he is reading. This stylistic device is used effectively in this essay.…
The author uses descriptive language to describe the dull and depressing mood of the story. For example, he uses a simile to illustrate the dullness of the story,” This look came over her face like the sun had wrinkled out and was not going to shine again till next June.”(4) When he mentions wrinkling it gives the reader…
Mary Lascelles, a famous literary scholar once said “I suspect that Jane Austen’s practice of denying the aid of figurative language which, as much as any other habits of expression, repelled Charlotte Brontë, and has alienated other readers, conscious with a dissatisfaction with her style that they have not cared to analyze.” Therefore, when an author doesn’t use figurative language, they can alienate their readers and not describe characters, moods, or other objects nearly as well. This would lead to unhappy readers and not an effective book that would not sell a substantial amount of copies. In the stories “The lemon Tree Billiards House” by Cedric Yamanaka and “The Treasure of Lemon Brown” by Walter Myers, both popular short stories, the…
In this excerpt, from A White Heron, by Sarah Orne Jewett, a number of literary techniques were used. All of them contributing to the excerpt's excellent flow. This essay will focus on three literary techniques Jewett used "" imagery, tone, and symbolism.…
Some people read stories and see them all completely different with all completely different meanings. In a way that is correct, they are all different, however; though this analysis it will be shown that“The Lottery” and “Young Goodman Brown” are very similar through different literary elements of fiction. In “The Lottery” and “Young Goodman Brown,” authors Shirley Jackson and Nathaniel Hawthorne employ point of view, setting and conflict to show similarities between these two very different stories.…
Louis L’amour, A western novelist, once stated “Start writing. no matter what, The water does not flow until the faucet is turned on.” This quote is important because when you start writing you can describe the story however you want . In the story, “The Treasure of Lemon Brown” by Walter Dean Myers, the author uses descriptive adjectives to develop an imagine. The author also uses figurative language to develop the mood in the story and to develop the characters.…