Wednesday, May 27, 2020
Relating to Kevin A Close Analysis of Shriverââ¬â¢s Language on Page 455. - Literature Essay Samples
Shriver uses the page (455) itself as an opportunity for Evaââ¬â¢s character to justify the actions and the, apparent, true intentions and thoughts of her son, Kevin. As we do not hear this from Kevin himself, due to the affectionless psychopathy he suffers from as a result of the maternal deprivation he was submitted to as a child (causing an inability for him to verbalize his emotions), his motherââ¬â¢s role as a depicter is vital in gaining the empathetic response that Shriver wants from her readers in relation to Kevinââ¬â¢s character. This may perhaps be one of the reasons for Shriverââ¬â¢s selection of an epistolary style; to allow character inferences to be made through the report of our main and most trusted character as their depictions, their indicative language, is our most reliable source of information and this is crucial in creating an effectively empathetic mother-son relationship for the desired end of the novel. The lexical choices Shriver makes throughout the novel and particularly on this page are reflective of our narratorââ¬â¢s hesitance about the reality of the situations that surround life around her son. The very first line (of this page), ââ¬Å"Clearly the sunlight had played some visual trickâ⬠, displays a modality change within the very same sentence by initially stating, through the confirmatory adverb, ââ¬Å"Clearlyâ⬠, that the tricks that the sunlight played were evident (to her), however, this is conflictory with Shriverââ¬â¢s adverbial decision towards the end of the sentence as she selects the imprecise adverb of frequency, ââ¬Å"someâ⬠, to determine the meaning and to introduce the certainty of the following noun phrase, ââ¬Å"visual trick.â⬠The syntactical patterning chosen to structure this sentence alone works to reduce the emphasis on the dynamic verbs ââ¬Å"had playedâ⬠as it is the ââ¬Å"visual trickâ⬠that is the most purposi ve phrase here. The noun, ââ¬Å"trickâ⬠, is also considerably effective as it continues the lexical thread that is implicit of an external act of deviance beguiling her, which we see her subtly recognisant of throughout the course of the novel. The fronted adverbial that begins the next sentence, ââ¬Å"He is merely waving an upraised arm- ââ¬Å", syntactically devalues the entire action that is being carried out. The dynamic verb, ââ¬Å"wavingâ⬠combined with the preposition, ââ¬Å"upraisedâ⬠creates enthusiastic imagery within the readerââ¬â¢s mind, the meaning of which is completely changed through the initial intensifier that is used, thusly lessening the significance of the wave itself. The oxymoronic imagery that this sentence creates illustrates the paradoxical narrator that weââ¬â¢ve grown to know and expect this from and the declarative sentence depicts the definiteness that her character consistently portrays, regardless of whether she is correct or not. The modal certainty in the following line, ââ¬Å"He must be hoping without saying as much- ââ¬Å", specifically in the word, ââ¬Å"mustâ⬠, proposes the extensiveness of her knowledge of him and portrays the accuracy of her schemas about him as she is able to understand his cognitions despite his lack of words. This works in unison with the lexical thread of motherhood that we see in the final few letters of the novel as we see Evaââ¬â¢s character embrace being the parent through accepting and appreciating her son despite his former psychopathic activities. Using the stative verb, ââ¬Å"hopingâ⬠, to reveal Kevinââ¬â¢s internal mental processes, despite his dynamicity (- that we see the lack thereof in the preposition ââ¬Å"withoutâ⬠, that comes before the dynamic verb ââ¬Å"sayingâ⬠-) displays the instinctiveness of identifying a childââ¬â¢s motives, an act that exists as an accompaniment of motherhood, something which has been anticipated by her ch aracter more or less as the novel progressed. Moving on through the sentences, the line, ââ¬Å"he is a teenager, after all- ââ¬Å", forebodes the final forgiving that is made known to us within the next letter. More specifically, the use of the common concrete noun ââ¬Å"teenagerâ⬠represents almost a justification from Eva of her sonââ¬â¢s actions allowing the commencement of her character progression in which she welcomes parenthood with semi-open arms. The next few lines subsequent to this share the lexical field of hurt, ââ¬Å"to apologise for lashing out at breakfastâ⬠, she again, continues with her act of reasoning for him however, the use of the dynamic verb ââ¬Å"lashingâ⬠in conjunction with this justificatory expression is contrary, although, this allows us to understand the nature of our, although now defensive, honest and equitable narrative voice; we can trust her account of things. She goes on to talk about his ââ¬Å"harsh, ugly repudiations of everything his father had tried to do for himâ⬠. The adjectival phrase ââ¬Å"harshâ⬠¦ repudiationsâ⬠continues the previous lexis denoting words of insult towards Franklin, however, again, contrarily, the common noun ââ¬Å"breakfastâ⬠implicitly suggests meals being eaten together despite the personal struggles that were being faced, creating communal family imagery. The pronoun ââ¬Å"everythingâ⬠advocates his dislike towards a matter of to pics which suggests that the things that Kevin was repudiating were not a reflection of his fatherââ¬â¢s poor ideas but more of Kevin himself. She also uses possessive pronouns fairly consistently throughout this page through always addressing Franklin as ââ¬Å"hisâ⬠father. The semantically interesting word choice Shriver makes at the end, as she talks of everything Franklin had ââ¬Å"tried to doâ⬠which is thought-provocative of the fact that, although attempted, he didnââ¬â¢t actually get it done. The accentuated adjective ââ¬Å"interestedâ⬠at the start of the next sentence, ââ¬Å"He is interested in how the Canon works,â⬠puts emphasis on the fact that he actually has had interests as that appears to have been a rare commodity for him. The syntactical positioning of words is important here too as the mention of ââ¬Å"the Canonâ⬠is at the end of the sentence as if to indicate that whatever his interest is in, is irrelevant, itââ¬â¢s just the fact that he has an interest in the first place. The series of words following this, ââ¬Å"he hopes youââ¬â¢ll explain what ââ¬Å"f-stopâ⬠means another timeâ⬠is almost cyclical in itself as it both begins and ends with indications that he wants a relationship with him or at least to make conversation with him, which is a start. The abstract noun, ââ¬Å"hopesâ⬠works in unity with the rest of the page in creating a positive ending image of Kevin as the novel comes to closer to its finish. The dy namic verb, ââ¬Å"explainâ⬠, refers to a long, in-depth process showing that he really wanted a conversation and time spent with him, even if it was to happen ââ¬Å"another timeâ⬠. Our narratorââ¬â¢s truthfulness is demonstrated to us once more as she says, ââ¬Å"In truth, he deeply admires his fatherââ¬â¢s enterpriseâ⬠. The common noun ââ¬Å"enterpriseâ⬠hangs off the end of the sentence as if to syntactically symbolise its insignificance. The adverbial intensifier ââ¬Å"deeplyâ⬠stresses this further as it highlights the passion within his admiration. She goes on to talk of how he, ââ¬Å"seized upon such a quirky professionâ⬠. The past principle of the dynamic verb ââ¬Å"[seize]â⬠emphasises his lack of control over acquiring the job, debatably reducing his value although itââ¬â¢s questionable to what extent as she continues to bring up the profession several times. The sentence concludes with her stating that it ââ¬Å"allows such creative latitudeâ⬠; the irony of the noun phrase ââ¬Å"creative latitudeâ⬠is shown through the noun as it indicates the freedom that he had, all of which was taken by his own son. The following sentence, ââ¬Å"Itââ¬â¢s just awkward for an adolescent boyâ⬠leaks through with the justificatory language that Eva so naturally uses. The noun phrase, ââ¬Å"adolescent boyâ⬠, along with the following explanations provided that begin with, ââ¬Å"at this ageâ⬠, imply that his age alone is enough for her to come to terms with the fact that he, her son, did what he did; it is enough for her to accept it. Her motherhood has leaked through several times due to Shriverââ¬â¢s consistent use of the lexical thread, we see it here again where she says, ââ¬Å"the boy feels awful nowâ⬠. Again, with the emphasis on his age through the semantically interesting word choice of ââ¬Å"boyâ⬠as opposed to any other masculine title, she continues justifying actions with a common concrete noun that defines his age. The modal consistency from the previous few sentences also continues through in the next line through the use of the stative verb, ââ¬Å"wasâ⬠, as she talks of how ââ¬Å"The fit of pique was all a lieâ⬠. As the page goes on, her motherhood continues to seep through into clear reflection of the lexical choices Shriver made. She speaks of how, ââ¬Å"heââ¬â¢s learned one heck of a lot from museumsâ⬠, the adjectival and exclamatory phrase ââ¬Å"learned one heckâ⬠accentuating that he was the one who learned (as opposed to the museum teaching him), making him an active part, or, due to the syntactical positioning of the words in this sentence, the most active part, in his own learning. The syntax also highlights the irrelevance of the common noun ââ¬Å"museumâ⬠as it is not about where he was learning things, but more so the fact that he was learning at all; this may be the reason for it being dropped off towards the end of the sentence instead having immediate attention drawn to it at the start. The line itself is unclear as to whether Eva is desperately searching for the good in her son in order to live with herself less guiltily, or whether sheââ¬â¢s come to the realisation that there was actually good in him, a goodness that she sees to remain. She continues, saying, ââ¬Å"he takes out those autumn leaves you two collectedâ⬠. The dynamic verb, ââ¬Å"takesâ⬠, again primarily addressing his role, and then going on to the demonstrative pronoun ââ¬Å"thoseâ⬠, indicating significance and important in the selected leaves as they were ones that the two of them had collected together; something that is drawn attention to as the words, ââ¬Å"you two collectedâ⬠were the final words of the sentence making it effective in emphasising the unity in their collection. Also, an additional lexical thread that echoes through the words of this page is the subtle use of the lexical field of mourning. There appears to be some sort of metaphorical gravitational pull towards this topic that is unclear until we reach towards the end of the novel as despite what seems to be going on, Evaââ¬â¢s character finds a way, though usually cryptically, to bring the subject to paper. Towards the end of the page, a more sinister lexis takes control of the sentences, ââ¬Å"Seeing that the colours are beginning to fade reminds him of the mortality of all things.â⬠The sentence itself uses pathetic fallacy to portray the emotion of the character, or more precisely, Evaââ¬â¢s own interpretation of his emotion as the use of the third-person present verb when stating that it ââ¬Å"reminds himâ⬠draws our attention back to the fact that all that we are being told about Kevin is through an account provided by Eva alone (minus the direct quotations that she has left without manipulation). Having a dynamic(?) verb, such as ââ¬Å"fadeâ⬠, describe the abstract noun ââ¬Å"coloursâ⬠which usually has positive connotations, paints a foreboding picture of something awful approaching, which, we see to be true in the end lines of the page, ââ¬Å"the grass was blackâ⬠. The literal language Shriver uses in order to present this image to us increases t he trauma of it and we immediately, and accurately, assume the worst: death. She goes on to speak of the arrows that she found ââ¬Å"angled through [his] throatâ⬠and an additional ââ¬Å"three other arrows ââ¬â stuck in the hollow between [his] pectorals where [she] loved to rest [her] head,â⬠illustrating Shriver, again, revisiting the lexical thread of mourning through Evaââ¬â¢s reminiscent thoughts whilst seeing her husbandââ¬â¢s body one final time; we see this through the use of the past participle of the stative verb ââ¬Å"[love]â⬠. The nouns and adjectives (ââ¬Å"stuckâ⬠, ââ¬Å"angledâ⬠), too, work to augment the effect of the revelation of Franklinââ¬â¢s death. Bibliography:Shriver. L (2003) We Need to Talk About Kevin. Counterpoint
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