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Pages:
3 pages/≈825 words
Sources:
2 Sources
Style:
MLA
Subject:
Literature & Language
Type:
Essay
Language:
English (U.S.)
Document:
MS Word
Date:
Total cost:
$ 10.8
Topic:

Close reading for language: Under the Skirt of Liberty

Essay Instructions:

Before you start please read the instruction, required story and the sample essay. I had upload all of this. I had been upload 2 story choose one whatever you like. use simple word and please explain.


 


Choose a brief passage (1-3 paragraphs or verses at most) from one of the stories or poems assigned in our course and write a paper microscopically examining the language, phrasing and symbolism of the passage you’ve selected.


Every one of your claims should be aimed at the specific contents of the text you are interpreting—any broad, general statements about the Human Condition should be avoided. Aim for as dense a written page as possible—every sentence should contain an analysis of the pieces you are analyzing and should avoid any preloaded clichés about the topic at hand.


Look at the passage with an eye for the smallest detail: verb tense and punctuation, diction and phrasing, image and metaphor. Focus on HOW the passage means (by what techniques) more than WHAT it means (avoid summarizing and paraphrasing what the author has already expressed).


      Examine at least one possible piece of wordplay in the piece. How does one word sounding like another make for a pun related to the piece’s main theme? “Eye” (as optic organ) puns on “I” (as self) and “aye” (as yes) in several of Ralph Waldo Emerson’s essays. Speak a key sentence or two out loud to yourself and locate the sounds it makes—how does the gentleness or harshness of a phrase connect to the “inner” meaning of that phrase?


        Look at articles before nouns—how does “The Case” suggests a bolder, less humble claim than “A Case”? Etymologize the root meaning of at least one word via a good dictionary and explain how, for example the “deep meaning” of the word “politics” (from the Greek word for “city”) or “English” (from “Angle”) relates to a literary piece. Look at a word’s prefixes: how does “dis-” or “de-” turn a word like “ease” into “disease” or “form” into “deform” ? Look at a word’s suffixes: how does a word like “quickness” turn a “temporary” adjective like “quick” into a more stable (or permanent) condition?


Address the relationship between the author and the speaker via the “tone” the writing takes: “You can be certain…” is more controlling than an apologetic “Bear with me…” Look at the transitions between paragraphs: how does a paragraph ending on the word “hopeless” relate to the next paragraph beginning “However…” Look for tricks of orthography (visual spelling)—in Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man a morally blind man is called a “poor fool,” a phrase whose doubled o’s suggest resemble vacant eyes.


“Comma” means “to cut off” in Greek—what ideas are being sliced apart or kept separate by an essay’s commas? How are the commas placing ideas in tidy compartments? How many of the essays’ metaphors are “visual”? Are any of the metaphors tactile (based on touch) or gustatory (taste) or auditory (hearing) or olfactory (smell)?


Are whole-sentence modifiers like “perhaps” and “maybe” being used to soften or qualify the piece’s claim? Are “certainly” and “absolutely” being used to the opposite effect? Examine what sorts of words an essay is placing immediately before its periods. What sort of terms are the sentences ending on? How does ending a sentence on “never” differ from ending a sentence on “possibly”?


       Every piece of literature has an “imagined audience”—how does the language of a story or poem suggest what sort of readership it anticipates? When using words like “we” or “us,” has the writer earned the right to speak in a collective voice? Where does the language of the piece seem demanding and elitist? Does it use foreign terms where domestic language would do? Does it use pop-culture slang to come across as “unpretentious”?


       Does the piece use (parentheses) as devices of intimacy or confidence? Does it engage in “false dichotomies” by splitting and polarizing our choices into too-simple black-and-white oppositions? Look at shifts in verb tenses. If the past and the future tenses are being used in the same sentence, why?


       Look at the piece’s use of “as” or “like” (which signal a simile) and explain what sort of comparison is being made. Look for question marks (which are of course automatically “rhetorical” in a written piece, and so not expecting a response) and ask yourself what these questions are really “saying.”


 


 


 


Essay Sample Content Preview:
Name
Instructor
Course
Date
Under the Skirt of Liberty
Although the poem is plain and simple, “Under the Skirt of Liberty” by Braschi Gianna demonstrates how a lot of debates and conversations on the empire have mainly focused on postcolonial diaspora critics. This piece poetically explores some of the issues that have been affecting the United States. Some of these issues include discrimination, illegal immigration, terrorism, oppression, racism, and the use of cheap labor in the country. This easy will take a close view of some of the claims the author uses to illustrate why there is no freedom and democracy. Braschi refers to the country as the United States of Banana.
In the first paragraph, Brasschi asserts that “the French and American jokers played a tennis match at the tournament and I became the trophy” (Braschi). Braschi uses the term the trophy to address the Statue of Liberty as a medal that the French people gave the Americans gave the United States during the American Revolution. The author indicates how Africans, Asians, Latins, Arabs, and Jews are demanding freedom because of oppression. Immigrants are also looking for freedom. The word "jokers" is used in the sentence. In reality, a joker is a person who does not like taking things seriously. Americans and French are referred to as the jokers because they were not committed to facilitating the value that the Statue of Liberty stood for. The narrator uses the article "I" to refer to herself. Braschi asserts that “I became the trophy” to show how she came to save the people of America from oppression. Lastly, the sentence is written in past tense. Braschi uses the word “became” to shows that it was an occurrence that happened in the past.
In the second paragraph, the narrator asserts that “My torch is a spotlight over people’s heads” (Braschi). This statement shows that Braschi has a dream of enlightening America and the rest of the world on matters related to freedom and justice. She desires to ensure there is equality and democracy. She does not intend to control but promote peace in America. The author compares her vision to a spotlight yet a spotlight is a lamp projecting an intense beam of light directly to an individual or a place. The name also connects to the scene when Braschi asserts that she was meant to abolish slavery and inspire change in the United States. Braschi refers to her dream as a torch. The term “my” has been used to indicate posse...
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