23
Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write about literature- you always start with the language itself- the details. In good writing all the details lead you to the central meaning of the piece. Choice of words is called _____________. Arrangement of words is called ______________.

Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

Intro to Analyzing Style and ToneAfter getting an overall sense of a piece- main

idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper.

When you write about literature- you always start with the language itself- the details. In good writing all the details lead you to the central meaning of the piece.

Choice of words is called _____________.Arrangement of words is called

______________.

Page 2: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

Tropes and SchemesArtful diction is a trope.Artful syntax is a scheme.

What is artful diction? Metaphor, simile, hyperbole, litote, etc., metonymy.

Artful syntax: parallelism, juxtaposition, antitheses, periodic sentence, inversion, etc.

Page 3: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

Artists have style!Just as artists have tricks that create depth

and meaning to a piece, writers use tropes and schemes to create depth to a piece of writing. Each artist has different tricks that he uses and is known form.

There are four areas to be considered when analyzing style: diction, syntax, treatment of the subject matter, figurative language

So….how do we analyze it?

Page 4: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

DictionWords can be monosyllabic, polysyllabic (the

higher the ratio of polysyllabic words, the more difficult the content)

Words can be colloquial, informal, or old-fashioned

Words can be concrete or abstractWords can be euphonious or cacophonous

Page 5: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

ImageryWhat are the things he deliberately included

in terms of details?What did he choose to not mention?Is the imagery figurative or literal?

Page 6: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

SyntaxSee HandoutThings to ponder:1. Examine the sentence length2. Examine sentence beginnings3. Examine the arrangement of ideas in a

sentence4. Examine the arrangement of ideas in a

paragraph5. Examine the sentence patterns

Page 7: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

How does E.B. White use syntax effectively within this one sentence?“Next morning when the first light came into

the sky and the sparrows stirred in the streets, when the cows rattled their chains and the rooster crowed and the early automobiles went whispering along the road, Wilbur awoke and looked for Charlotte.”

Page 8: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

What can we observe?The sentence follows the sun, the birds, the cows,

then the cars. Finally when the world is awake, Wilbur gets up to look for Charlotte. The movement of the sentence of the sentence takes us from the sunlight, which not only begins the day but represents the farthest remove from humanity, down through birds, cows, and roosters- coming ever close to us- until it gets to the cars, driven by human beings. But no human beings appear, so we can continue to enjoy the pretense that Wilbur and Charlotte are human even though they are actually a pig and a spider, respectively.

Page 9: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

What about the sentences?The sentence is periodic, moving from the

opening adverb phrase through the two successive adverb clauses, the second longer than the first to the final main clause- the main focal and grammatical point of the sentence. In addition, it may be helpful to note that in the first subordinate clause, the subjects are the sun and the sparrows- natural and free-ranging- while in the second, the subjects are cows in chains, a rooster, and the automobiles. So by the time Wilbur awakes and goes to look for Charlotte, the scene has been fully set.

Page 10: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

From Huck Finn“Col. Grangerford was very tall and very slim,

and had a darkish-paly complexion, not a sign of red in it anywheres; he was clean-shaved every morning all over his thin face, and he had the thinnest kind of lips, and the thinnest kind of nostrils, and the high nose, and heavy eyebrows, and the blackest kind of eyes, sunk so deep back that they seemed like they was looking out of caverns at you, as you may say.”

Page 11: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

What about the syntax?The sentence is loose, piling detail after detail using

repetition and near-repetitions (“very slim.” “thin face,” “thinnest kind of lips.” “Thinnest kind of nostrils.” to suggest the almost spectral quality of the colonel. Reinforcing the hawklike, threatening appearance of the man is the emphasis on superlatives- the “blackest kind of eyes.” and the use of the simile “sunk so deep back that they seemed like they was looking out of caverns at you.” Huck Finn’s naïve, colloquial speech reveals his ingenuous and ironic admiration of this frightening character, but the careful reader knows better.”

Page 12: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

Take Special note of ParallellismSimilarity of structure in a pair or series of

related words, phrases, or clauses.

Anaphora and epistrophe are forms of parallelism.Parallel construction requires that expressions of

similar content and function should be outwardly similar. The likeness of form enables the reader to recognize more readily the likeness of content and function. Familiar instances from the Bible are the Ten Commandments, the Beatitudes, and the petitions of the Lord's Prayer.

Page 13: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

Faulty ParallelismStudents think they should always be varying

everything. Sometimes this is true, but don’t be afraid of parallel construction.

Faulty Parallelism: Formerly, science was taught by the textbook method,

while now the laboratory method is employed.

Corrected Parallelism:Formerly, science was taught by the textbook

method; now it is taught by the laboratory method.

Page 14: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

Fix these:The French, the Italians, Spanish, and

PortugueseIn spring, summer, or in winterIt was both a long ceremony and very tediousA time not for words, but actionMy objections are, first, the injustice of the

measure; second, that it is unconstitutional.

Page 15: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

Corrections:The French, the Italians, the Spanish, and the

PortugueseIn spring, summer, or winter (In spring, in

summer, or in winter)The ceremony was both long and tedious.A time not for words, but for actionMy objections are, first, that the measure is

unjust; second, that it is unconstitutional.

Page 16: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

The prose of earlier centuries tends to be syntactically more complex than contemporary writing.

Hawthorne’s writing in The Scarlet Letter typifies this style—ornate description, elevated language, frequent use of periodic sentence, and sentences in which several parts combine to describe the subject or clarify the major action of the verb

Page 17: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

When looking at someone’s style think DIDLSDiction- connotations, tropesImages-vivid appeals, figurative languageDetails- what is included, omittedLanguage- overall use of language, formal,

clinical, jargon, etc.Sentence Structure- syntax- sometimes this

alone can give clues to the author’s personality, attitude toward subject and reader, etc.

Page 18: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

” The door of the jail being flung open from within there appeared, in the first place, like a black shadow emerging into the sunshine, the grim and grisly presence of the town-beadle, with a sword by his side, and his staff of office in his hand.”

Page 19: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

Note first the inverted sentence structure. The subject is “the grim and grisly presence of the town-beadle,” and the verb “appeared” precedes it. The word “there,” which seems like the grammatical subject, is actually only a place holder, since it doesn’t tell us what appeared. Consider the effect of this order.

The inverted syntax presents the visual details in the exact sequence Hawthorne wants the reader to imagine.

Page 20: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

Within the sentence, in other words, the simile foreshadows the town-beadle’s impression on the crowd. Likewise, the tone established by the town- beadle’s “grim and grisly presence” anticipates and sets the mood for the character who follows him (both in the order of the passage and literally through the jail-house door)— the shame-faced Hester Prynne.

Page 21: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

ActivityAnalyze this quote by Pope John Paul II

“Here, as at Aushwitz and many other places in Europe, we are overcome by the echo of the heart-rending laments of so many. Men, women, and children cry out to us from the depths of the horror that they knew. How can we fail to heed their cry? No one can forget or ignore what happened. No one can diminish its scale.”

Page 22: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

What rhetorical devices are used in this quote?Metaphor- the echoParallelism- “no one can forget”- “No one can

diminish”Imagery- men, women and children cry, echo,

AuschwitzRhetorical questionsSyntax- long complex sentences, then shorter

rhetorical questions

What is the purpose of each rhetorical device?

Page 23: Intro to Analyzing Style and Tone After getting an overall sense of a piece- main idea, what’s the appeals, we’re reading to dig deeper. When you write

Put your thoughts in a paragraphPope John Paul, with his emphasis on “here”, as isolated

by a comma, is drawing attention to all the visual imagery associated with the concentration camp from where he is making his remarks. He highlights, before anything else, the pervasive hate over Europe as epitomized in Auschwitz- the largest of such camps. He acknowledges how, more than anything, it “overcomes us”- overpowers us by a metaphorical echo. This personification accompanied by the image of “men, women and children” crying from the “depths of horror” heightens our sensitivity to the fact that when we listen to this “echo”- although at first it may be quiet, it can overwhelm us even today. The final sentences are shorter- there is a rhetorical question followed by an anaphora drawing emphasis to the negative word “no” and shifting what was at first a tone of sorrow to one of determination to never forget!