The Ashen Guy
“I was almost out,” sends chills throughout the statue figured people of New York (Beller 61). Thomas Beller, an author of a collection of short stories, manifests the horrific surroundings happening at the World Trade Center on that brisk morning of September 11, 2001. New York residents are not only frantic and solicitous; they stand trembling from terror. Beller exhibits the irregular atmosphere around him: “Cop cars parked at odd angles, their red sirens spinning” (Beller 60). Demonstrating the denial, barren faces of the people witnessing a World Trade Center tower descending to the ground. Distinctly developing a tone throughout this narrative; Thomas Beller validates the tone through different perspectives.
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Although the sentences are concise; it shows the immediate shock.
Covered in debris from one of the descending World Trade Center towers. New York residencies poised with woe. “I don’t know what happened” (Beller 62) , was the aghast words of the ashen guy. Besides the ashen guy; an abundance of people were permeated with questions. A virtuous lady revealed her concerns: “Do you know which way the tower fell” (Beller 62). Querying these concerns establishes the astonishment, disturbance, and dismay the multitude of people felt. By Beller acknowledging the concerns of the innocence, he is establishing the sympathy for the people who witnessed this horrifying scene. Although the author perceives the narrative has came to a closure; it has only begun. “There was a huge rumbling sound accompanied by the sound of people shrieking. Everyone who wasn’t already looking turned to see the remaining building start to crumble on itself, a huge ball of smoke rising out from beneath it, a mushroom cloud in reverse” (Beller 62). Making your audience assume that the narrative has came to a conclusion can be effective on the reader’s feel empathy for the one’s who were not so
Imagine your brother sacrificing his life only to be denied honor. Author, Michael Burke, writes “No Fireman at Ground Zero This 9/11?”based on Mayor Bloomberg’s decision of not honoring the first responders. Burke uses several techniques to catch the eyes of voters, the city of New York, and those who publish in the Wall Street Journal. Burke persuades the audience that the first responders deserve to be honored based on the techniques of pathos, inversion, diction, and anaphoras.
Fifteen years after the fateful date of September 11, 2001, this school year marks the first year that almost no American high school freshman was alive for the day forever engrained in America's past. Anyone old enough to remember that clear Tuesday morning can pinpoint what he or she was doing when the press released the astounding news: a plane had crashed into the north tower of the World Trade Center. No matter how routine their day may have been, most witnesses can at least recall their feelings, as the American sense of safety would forever be tainted. As the world watched in dismay from their televisions, the state inside the World Trade Center was declared an emergency. Those on floors 78 through 84, where the first plane ripped
This photograph is a photo taken from the horrific, devastating terrorist attack on the twin towers on September 11, 2001. This photograph shows the after effect of two planes crashing into the world trade centers. The attack on the world trade centers was placed in New York. This photograph shows two hijacked planes crashing into the twin towers. The photo shows the buildings going down with debris.
Rhetorical Analysis of “Fear and Loathing in America” September 11th, 2001, the greatest tragedy in American history. Four hijacked flights crashed, two into the World Trade Center, one into the Pentagon, and one attempted to hit the White House. A day that will go down in history. A mere 24 hours after the devastating attack Hunter S. Thompson wrote “Fear and Loathing in America” to convey the horror and magnitude of the attack. Thompson utilizes allusions, colloquial tone, and hyperbole to achieve his purpose.
In the North tower eleven people were trapped in a conference room. Smoke began to fill the room. the people called their loved ones like they would never get out. They were sure they were gonna die in that
The 9/11 Memorial Museum sits on 180 Greenwich Street in New York City directly where the twin towers used to sit. It was made commemorate the tragic event that happened on September 11, 2001. This is the first year that this event will be taught in history classes in high schools across the nation since this year’s high school freshman class was not born in 2001. I was about four years old when 9/11 happened and although I don’t remember when it happened it has impacted my life. It has helped me to understand the concept of History besides what is taught in our textbooks.
The writing “We Choose Honor” has a very moving subject that includes a variety of syntax, diction, imagery, and tone to achieve its claim. The subject itself is 9/11, the catastrophic disaster that moved the United States in a way it hadn’t in decades. With such a large topic at hand, Elie Wiesel takes the disaster and shapes it into a writing that emotionally captures millions of readers. The all-around purpose of this writing is to empower and inform the people reading; Unfortunately, such an instance will be forever engraved in the skull’s of those affected by this tragedy, and Wiesel was one of them. Nonetheless, the tragic loss of thousands of individuals on that day will be eternally remembered through history.
On September 11, 2001, tragedy struck the city of New York. On that fateful day, two airplanes were hijacked by terrorists and flew straight into the twin towers. Each tower fell completely to the ground, taking thousands of lives with it and injuring thousands more. Not only did that day leave thousands of families without their loved ones, it also left an entire city and an entire country to deal with the aftermath of the destruction. Poet, Nancy Mercado, worries that one day people will forget that heartbreaking day.
In the article, “The Hero with a Thousand Faces”, Christopher Vogler talks about a very influential book or also used as a guideline for many hero based movies. Just about every movie or book that includes a hero as one of the main characters can be lead through the guideline and will follow the same major events in the story of the hero being lead through the phases. The article is divided into many small sections that explain multiple facts or parts of the book. Further on in the article, there are lots of information about evidence of how the definition of a hero is the same around the world. For example, in section eight, Campbell discovers the myth of a hero is universal and occurs in every culture.
September 11 will always be remembered for the horrific tragedy that happened. Thomas Beller is the author of “Ashen Guy”. In this short story, Beller goes through the different perspectives of people and how the mood changes by his use of tone. There are several different tones used throughout the short story, such as nervous, urgent, panicked, confused,and imagery, that change just as the peoples point of views does.
The references and inclusions of the Mardi Gras celebration, political events, and eyewitness accounts and stories from citizens of New Orleans curates an emotional response within the audience - whether it be the imagery of starving men, women, and children - or the irony of the government’s statement of preparedness. These emotions and feelings of desolation and resentment help empower and unite Spike’s views of our country’s failure and dishonesty towards it’s own proactivity.
It is almost sixteen years since that fear was imposed on us and the age of terror began in earnest. From the moment the Twin Towers fell, 9/11 was seen as a watershed, a historical turning point of grand and irreversible proportions. With the acrid smoke still swirling above ground zero, the mantras repeated constantly were that 9/11 had ?changed everything that nothing would ever be the same.? By now we see those mantras for what they were: natural, perhaps inevitable, exaggerations in the face of
The creative non-fiction piece definitely grabbed my attention much more closely than the news article. Hunter S. Thompson 's short story titiled "Fear and Loathing in America,” begins by placing us there at the scene of devastation when he describes the planes crashing into the World Trade Center on what seemed like another normal day (Thompson, 2001, para. 1). On the other hand, The New York Times article bluntly states that sports events were cancelled due to terrorist attacks. It dragged on to describe in monotonous and sequential detail many of the events that were cancelled in the United States and abroad (Litsky & Williams, 2001, para. 1). Contrasting the two reveals how creative story telling is significant to writing well.
“Terrorist attacks can shake the foundations of our biggest buildings, but they cannot touch the foundation of America. These acts shatter steel, but they cannot dent the steel of American resolve.” George W. Bush delivered this speech on the night of the September 11 attacks. The shattered steel of the Twin Towers, once towering the New York City skyline, forever changed America and its response to terrorism. The largest foreign attack on U.S. soil appropriately gave reason to Americans to recoil in fear and lose trust in the future, but in reality, the country displayed the opposite reaction.
Falling Man On 11th of September America was in chaos due to an event which shocked the whole world. Two towers fell and America was at war. With people suiciding by jumping from the towers and rubble, mud and debris flying around the streets of New York, chaos thrived and people panicked.