Description
Write a detailed, focused , engaged critical/analytical essay. Be very specific. Support your assertions textually. Narrow your focus to small sections or a chapter. Describe, explain, detail and connect your ideas for your reader. Show your reader these ideas in action through textual example.
*How does Hersey arrange his chapters to create the narrative drive. Choose one chapter. Think about how that particular chapter functions in the book as a whole. How does it build on what came before it? how does it anticipate what comes after? Does it build connections between characters? Does it contribute to the reader’s understanding of characters? What is revealed? What is withheld?
Prompt: Anatomy of a scene. Choose a place/scene/situation in the book that particularly strikes you. Deconstruct it. How does Hersey create it? Look at language and syntax, imagery, metaphor, simile, arrangement, punctuation. What makes this piece work?
Explanation & Answer
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Analysis of a Situation in the Second Chapter of Hiroshima
Introduction
Narratives consist of elements that help the reader to imagine the series of events that
resulted in the story that is being told by the narrator. The arrangement of the plots, settings, and
description of the actions of the characters are designed to accomplish this goal. It is this premise
that would be used to analyze Hiroshima by John Hersey, which described some of the events,
reactions, and actions that occurred after the first atomic bomb was dropped in the Japanese city.
Although the report was published in the New Yorker as a journalist account of the aftermath of
the attack, the effective use of the techniques of literary journalism made it a realistic account of
the situation. Therefore, critical review of the anatomy of the author's description situation after
the bomb explosion revealed the effective use of language, metaphor, and arrangement to
describe the level of emotional torture and physical burden that the destruction placed on the
survivors of the attack.
Literary Analysis of the Second Chapter
In the second chapter of Hiroshima, Hersey described the fear and horrific feelings that
the survivors of the atomic bomb blast had on the day after the incident. While the people were
unsure of the causes of the destruction, they became highly paranoid and blamed every typical
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incident on the American. A change in their health status is considere...
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