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A Rhetorical Analysis Of 'The Sight'

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A Rhetorical Analysis Of 'The Sight'
“The Sight” is written in the perspective of Steve, who’s trying to help out his friend Adam. He initially thinks Adam’s been cooped up in his room due to his recent breakup. However, later he discovers that his friend, Adam, is seeing hallucination. Now, to Adam, these hallucinations are his current reality. The hallucinations consist of devil horns on everyone around him, including Adam. Steve believes that Adam is on the verge of a mental break down and at the end, we see him ready to send Adam to a mental institution. I really enjoyed reading the aspect of Adam’s ability to see horns and how the length varied amongst person to person. It puts the audience in doubt on who to believe. Adam and his supernatural sight or Steve who thinks Adam

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