First, I will ask two of you to come to the board to participate in an experiment… Here are the materials: use them however you like… When I was a little boy – that is to say not so long ago – I was always drawing, drawing, drawing… all day long – even in class – most of the time, massive churches or elegant castles. Kaplas, Playmobils were invading the living room for months… Construction games were a passion, a unique way of making my dreams concrete. But as I had to clean the rooms – the least fun – I was always inventing a dramatic way of doing it: a cataclysm breaking the monument was by far, my favourite part. « La Chute », the destruction was an essential part of the story, the condition to liberate the space in order to rebuild some …show more content…
Anna Karenina deals with two interlocking destinies spiraling up or down, around the narrative axis. Levin climbs the stairs and reaches happiness while Anna irremediably falls down the stairs until she commits suicide. III-Architectural transposition emphasizes the importance of construction in literary works. But what about destruction? Destruction is inspiring writerS as well… In Jane Eyre, the castle’s destruction by fire is the narrative condition for destroying Edward’s first mariage and allows Jane and Edward to be married at last. The destruction of the castle is a liberation, a rebirth, a reconstruction. The same idea goes for Apollinaire who destroys the traditional format of the poem with his beautiful Calligrammes… Literature can also destroy the genres, the topoi, the horizons of expectation, the sense, the character… Literature can destroy itself, revealing how transgressive, playful and experimental it can be. In fact, destruction is a synonym of …show more content…
Because architecture helps us to define literature in a lot of ways… As a vertical conquest – steeple, castle tower, factory chimney – or a horizontal extension – bridge, tunnel –, architecture, like literature, is a matter of links and connection [bridge] but also of frontiers and separation. In the sense of archi-structure, one could also speak of social, familial, cultural, moral architecture that literature can question… Now, let’s have a look at what our architects have built… Both of them had the same amount of kaplas in the same colours… However, their creations are different. Just like the writers make different books but use the same language, the same colourful or neutral words… The Tower of Babel myth explains Lit and Arch were bound together from the very beginning. The real cement that allows mankind to build the tower is language, this adamic tongue whose words are reproducible moulded bricks. The Babel partition can be thus considered as the birth of civilisation, when architecture began to tell stories and stories began to deal with
“The Thing They Carried” by Tim O’Brien In the war novel “The Thing They Carry”, by Tim O’Brien, O’Brien open up his mind going down memories and stories he experience in the horrifying Vietnam war in 1950s-1980s. He used the signpost memory moment of truths and lies to reveal the burden of the war. Truth is what the soldier in the war, memories remember about, does whose location are unknown and what happens to them. Lies is everything that the soldiers can’t reveal to the public not just about the war but how they feel, damage which took place.
Love, regret, fear, and courage are all intertwined into Tim O’Brien's book, The Things They Carried. O'Brien uses his own experiences with the Vietnam war as well as stories told from his companions to create a book to show how the war affects people differently. By using his own story, he is able to have an honest outlook into the war that tells about the things that happened off of the footage that the nation could watch. The individual stories of the men are shown throughout this book to allow for a full circle story that captures most all aspects of the war, in essence, what happened other than the fighting. Instead of discussing the book as a whole, I am focusing on the main themes that are shown throughout the book.
Lumumba White Hr.3 The Things They Carried Literary Analysis “Battle is the most magnificent competition in which a human being can be in, Bringing out the best in people . All men are afraid in battle the coward is the one who let’s his fears overcome his senses of duty”(ExampleEssay.com).” The Thing They Carried” by Tim O’Brien showed some of theses characteristics in some of the characters in the book. That I want to include that some of the events and presentations are interpret a product of culture from the author.
In the book An Invisible Thread, the author often provides examples of parents that have a poor quality of parenting. First there is Laura’s father Nunziato Carino, who’s a bartender. After he is done with his shift, he would often come home drunk and yell at his son, Frank who is Five. Frank will quickly hide under his bed sheet as his father dammed his name again and again. This happened frequently and every one would hide in their rooms as unfortunate Frank takes his father’s heavy word beating each night.
In Elizabeth Bishop’s poem, “One Art,” it starts as a “bittersweet, but nonetheless efficacious philosophy of survival but, as Bishop continues in the poem to list the items she has lost, “she progressively adds irony onto that first line” (Sircy 242). By the end of the poem it shows that “disaster has actually mastered her” (Sircy 244). Leaving the audience to believe “even though the poem is about falling away, from disaster, we instead fall towards the conclusion that we realize that the poetry itself affords us a mastery” (Shapiro 61). Additionally, that the poem is “a convincingly drastic approach to the archaic French form. It shows what drabness may for an all-too-golden repetitive form” (Shapiro 60).
Justine Sabo Professor Sidle ENGL2327 9 March 2017 Literary Analysis on Eliza Wharton from "The Coquette" ` In her epistolary novel, "The Coquette", Hannah Webster Foster, uses the death of Eliza Wharton to bring attention to the the social injustices and cultural restraints that women of the new nation faced. Eliza Wharton's downfall is caused by her quest for freedom and independence from the cultural norms where women were expected to conform to social expectations or suffer the consequences. Foster highlights the circumstances surrounding Eliza's downfall by allowing the reader to get an inside look at her feelings, motives, and the sequence of events leading up to her demise through the close examination of letters written by
Sometimes you have to look at both perspectives of an argument to completely understand them. The author of Tortilla Sun is Jennifer Cervantes and Diana López wrote Confetti Girl. These two novels are realistic fiction. Confetti Girl revolves around a girl who only has a father who is a teacher and lends her daughter his copy of a book. The girl says that she will read the book but instead puts a soda can on it.
“The Pit and the Pendulum,” the story of life and death. The narrator is sentenced to death during the inquisition, waiting for his execution, he is trapped in a dark dungeon. The narrator believes he is going to die in this dungeon which is unusual because executions are usually public. In this dungeon is a small pit in the center and a pendulum swinging from the ceiling slowly descending to kill the narrator. The pendulum retracted into the ceiling and the narrator thought he was going to live, but the walls of the dungeon started to heat up and close in on the narrator pushing him into the pit.
In this essay, "Why Literature Matters", author Dana Gioia sets up an argument about literature. Which she uses various ways to persuade her audience be in favor of her proposal; by showing statistic evidence, facts, and historical evidence, as well as some ironies, diction, and the appeals to reader's emotion. First of all, Gioia begins with strong appeals to reader's logos by clearly laying out the statistic source. For example, "According to the 2002 survey of Public Participation in the Arts, the reading population of the Americans is declining. " In turn, is an attempt to point out the thesis statement and make the readers to think out about this topic wile reading through her essay.
New cities are founded and the humans have all one language. The real purpose of the beginning chapters of
Moreover the fire also resembles the purging of Montag. Montag’ burning of his house and the TV signifies his rebellion and rejection of the vales of his society. Through burning his own house Montag like a phoenix destroys his old self by fire to be reborn from the ashes as a new person once again. Killing captain Beatty symbolizes the destruction of the system, because by doing so he frees himself from the influence of his society which give him the chance to think and choose freely for first time in his life. Also, another side of fire is also revealed to Montag ay the end of the novel when he meets the rebel group.
Bronte 's Jane Eyre transcends the genres of literature to depict the emotional and character development of its protagonist. Although no overall genre dominates the novel exclusively, the vivid use of setting contributes towards the portrayal of Bronte’s bildungsroman (Realisms, 92) and defines the protagonist’s struggles as she grapples with her inner-self, and the social expectations of her gender. The novel incorporates Jane’s frequent conflicts, oppression, isolation and self-examination as she defends her identity and independence. Set amongst five separate locations, Bronte’s skilful use of literal and metaphorical landscapes, nature, and imagery, skilfully intertwines with the plot and denotes each phrase of her maturity.
“The Story of an Hour” is written by Kate Chopin. The main character in this story is Louise Mallard, a married woman in the 19th century who has a heart defect, she receives news that her husband died in an accident. After hearing the news of her husband she goes into solitude into her room where she finds herself not has sad about her husband but feeling some relief that she can live her own life and gains a new sense of freedom that she will have in the later days to come. This is where the theme of freedom comes in, this is seen using many literary elements throughout the story some of these would be foreshadowing, irony, and symbols to show Mrs. Mallard new- found freedom from her “late” husband.
Kaitlyn Coleman Mr. Edwards ENGL 2130 9 March 2018 Nature’s Role in Realism Literary naturalism uses raw and natural emotions to express the importance of nature in literature, and it is a branch of realism. Literary naturalists relate humans to their animalistic characteristics. By doing so, the author shows that humans and animals are the same, and a humans ontology is irrelevant.
Louise’s victory in accepting her husband’s death is a feeling that she now cannot live without. The ultimate death of Louise Mallard is one that represents physical and emotional defeat. In this dramatic short story, Chopin uses imagery to sew together a tapestry of emotions all encompassed in an ill-stricken widow. Works Cited Chopin, Kate. “The Story of an Hour.”