Monday, December 16, 2013

"Young Goodman Brown" Literary Element 1

The entirety of “Young Goodman Brown” alludes to a spiritual battle within every person. Through the classic use of “dark" and “light” highlights the contrast between good versus evil, and even the ambiguity, the “grey area” if you will, between the two.

 Firstly, the name of Goodman Brown’s wife, Faith, alludes to the religious/spiritual undertones of the story. Brown’s closeness to his wife translates to an assumed strong faith that he has. But when Goodman Brown gives into curiosity and temptation, he departs on a nighttime journey into the deceptive forest, his faith, and will, is tested by evil. As he departs, and gives into the evil temptation he mistakenly says to Faith, “no harm will come to thee.” It is at that point that he, for once and for all, leaves the lightness of his wife’s love and into the “dreary road, darkened by… the gloomiest trees of the forest,” therefore leaving his spiritual faith indefinitely. In fact, when met by the first embodiment of evil temptation in the forest, Goodman Brown states that he was “kept back a while by faith,” meaning his pure spirituality kept him from consenting to corruption (going into the forest).As Goodman Brown goes further into the forest and further and further away from his faith, it gets increasingly harder for him to turn down temptations from other travelers.

Through analyses of “Young Goodman Brown” one is assured to stay true to themselves and their beliefs, thus straying away from those who tempt evil in everyday life, and sticking to one’s own faith.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

"The Story of an Hour" Literary Elements

Option 2: "Chopin is an artist in her use of irony. Preparation for the ending is provided by clues or foreshadowing embedded in the story. Identify these and explain how each contributes to the conclusion."

    Separate examples of foreshadow lead to the conclusion in their own unique way and through different techniques exemplify individual elements of the ending. The majority of the foreshadowing, though, is directed towards Mrs. Mallard's death. 

    The first example of Chopin's use of foreshadowing is the development of Mrs. Mallard’s character. The simple fact that "Mrs. Mallard was afflicted with a heart trouble" is foreshadowing in its own rite. When this statement is taken literally and figuratively, both hint at the conclusion of the story. When the metaphorical implications are analyzed, Mrs. Mallard’s heart disease or “heartbreak” provides justification for the temporary elation she experiences upon hearing the grave news of her husband’s passing. Labeling the heartbreak of Mrs. Mallard’s marriage a “heart disease” also suggests that, like heart disease, heart ache is not easily cured; which, therefore, foreshadows her dramatic reaction to seeing her husband. The foreshadowing of the literal “heart disease” is much more apparent. Mrs. Mallard’s physical ailment is ultimately the direct cause of her “[death] of heart disease.” Symptoms of cardiac episodes, breathing “tumultuously,” “pulses beat(ing) fast” and “coursing blood” also foreshadow her death.

    Another exhibition of foreshadowing is how Mrs. Mallard senses “something coming to her.” This could possibly refer to her “knowing” or at least sensing her impending death. The seemingly perpetual joy she models and experiences parallels many peoples’ perception of death—freeing (“Free body and soul free”), unceasingly approaching (“creeping out of the sky, reaching toward her through… the air”), untimely, unexpected, and, ultimately: frightening (“[Mrs. Mallard had] a look of terror”).

    The entirety of the short story is ironic. The majority of the irony is in the briefness of Mrs. Mallard’s bliss. Just as Mrs. Mallard truly feels she has her life to herself, where “there would be no one to live for… (and) she would live for herself,” all of her hopes are destroyed. Just as life is worth living, her life is taken away by the “joy that kills.”

    Through exploration of literal and metaphorical analyses of “heart disease” and of commonly assumed aspects of death, the reader can accurately foreshadow Mrs. Mallard’s death long before it even takes place.