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Published byCamilla Todd Modified over 8 years ago
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Writing Style in Tale of Two Cities AKA the unexpected lovechild between poetry and prose
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Note: we will be pulling heavily from bookmark #s 1-5!
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Dickens’ writing style Dickens loved him some lit devices alliteration, asyndeton, metaphor, simile, hyperbole, anaphora, parallelism, polysyndeton, epistrophe, personification and antithesis Extremely poetic writer Stories were typically read aloud
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Dickens’ writing style Allusion – Victorian expectation Direct Adapted (paraphrased quote, not explicit) Subtext (worked into structure/theme; Dante and CBC) Character epithets (“honest” Jerry, etc.) to create character and tone Selection of details Images in wrirting Beauty amidst ugliness background as a reporter?
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Dickens’ writing style Motif Burial Business Road/River Light/shadow Tone of writing Comic Sentimental Scary Angry
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Dickens’ writing style ALL elements or description build to a single tone Split into groups. Assign each group a section. Tone of section What writing elements contribute to this tone.
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The Passages (25) “A wild-looking woman…” to end of chapter (27) Start of chapter to “The time was to come…” (28) (28) “And now that the cloud…” to “For the time was to come…” (30) (33) “Mr. Jarvis Lorry and…” to end of (34) (43) “She had laid her head…” to end of (44)
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The following passage is from Charles Dickens’ masterpiece, A Tale of Two Cities. Read it carefully. Then, write a well-organized essay in which you analyze how Dickens uses a variety of literary devices and techniques to create a specific tone.
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