This passage reveals that the German soldier is oppressed, the author explores the idea with the use of irony. According to the passage, it mentions, “The German had a carbine on is back, and the tails of his dark-grey coat were tied around his legs, so that he walked with the wide-legged, ungainly tread of a bear”(Mulisch 41). Irony is presented to the audience in the subtle role of the German soldier. Mulisch incorporates the passage with specific diction that provokes the reader to look closer at the text. For example, "wide-legged" and "ungainly" ignite the idea of no stability. A person characterized as
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
Irony of Opression
This passage reveals that the German soldier is oppressed, the author explores the idea with the use of irony. According to the passage, it mentions, “The German had a carbine on is back, and the tails of his dark-grey coat were tied around his legs, so that he walked with the wide-legged, ungainly tread of a bear”(Mulisch 41). Irony is presented to the audience in the subtle role of the German soldier. Mulisch incorporates the passage with specific diction that provokes the reader to look closer at the text. For example, "wide-legged" and "ungainly" ignite the idea of no stability. A person characterized as
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Avoid passive voice. Instead of saying, "Irony is presented to the audience in the subtle role of the German soldier," saying "The author presents irony to the reader..." puts the sentence into active voice. Also, starting out the first sentence with "Arguably," will help make for more fluid sentence structure.
ReplyDeleteP.S. The "puppet" idea is especially intriguing. Very good close attention to detail.
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