When Shirley Jackson's "Lottery" was first published in New Yorker in 1948, it brought nervousness to the reader. "This story is inflamed.The behavior of the reader seems to be that the bombs hit their face ... Shirley was shocked by the United States in the mid-20th century ... she gave people the pain about themselves The truth "(Oppenheimer 129). Interestingly, this story is consistent with today's readers. When my English class recently saw that video, the students who had never read that story until then had a very strong reaction until the end.
It is filled with the cynical expectation of the author that the worst mankind will emerge. In the best case, the reader handed the gun to an inexperienced hunter like "White" Jim is a fool, and in the worst case they believe that he arrived (May) thinking. Through this strategy Lardner redirects the important gaze to the reader from the role of the story and reminds him that he should get his important social commentary. Bibliography, Hull and Charlie Sweet. "Civilization Barber: The major accomplice of haircut" Short Study 23 (1986): 450 - 453. Brooks, Clean, Robert Pen Warren. Understand the novel. New York: Appleton, Century, Crofts, 1959. Cowlishaw, Brian. "Role of reader in Rhetoric of Ring Lardner" Short story research 31, no. 2 (Spring of 1994): 207. Hardwick, Elizabeth. "Ring." New York Book Review 1, no. 1, 1963. Gilliard, Sara. "The discourse of Radnor's power." Short story Research 22 (1985): 331-337
Facts about companions of American short story document, 2nd edition (literary series companion)
Restraint! ... the fact I am facing - the dazzling fact. "(Conrad, 1990, p.38) Through" The Heart of Darkness ", Conrad depicts and exposes mankind in the best and worst conditions.The main point of communication to Conrad's readers is the progress of technology It is not merely a cultural excellence or a civilization but a moral norm that makes them lively.Culture is better than other cultures.
More than a century ago, Mark Twain created an American literary work that revealed the worst mankind. In his novel "The Adventure of Huckleberry Finn" Twain has developed a plot intertwined with his criticism of society. Both Hack and Jim's leading companies have avoided the "unfair" social approach. Hack is seen as a troubled maker who is not educated and faces the pressure to transform it into a society often "humanized". Jim is a slave, not a real person, but a mere asset. Since they escape civilization and are traveling along the Mississippi River, they are faced with many social flaws that we can still connect today. Twain also used extreme sarcasm and humor to stimulate his criticism. Satire Twain is deeply involved in hypocrisy, racial discrimination, greedy