Monday, August 25, 2008

Won’t You Be My Friendser?” 9

Identify two figures of speech in paragraph 1. What is the effect of this language?

2 comments:

Unknown said...

To give a stronger effect in her work, Wurster uses figures of speech in her article. In the second sentence she says, "[...]inevitably cropped up" referring to the new social-networking sites. Of course, websites, or anything virtual, cannot literally crop up. She uses this metaphor to represent how websites came to be with a funner, stronger impact. Later on, in her fourth sentence, she says "like time-wasting mirror gazing" in reference to the time wasted posting up pictures, personal information, and lists of favorite everything. The way she uses this simile gives the sentence a sense of mockery which has a greater impact on the audience.

dani.k said...

Two figures of speech in the first paragraph are “my friends were joining […], but to me it all seemed like time-wasting mirror gazing” and referring to social-networking sites as an “international rooftop” where people “exploited it (their square footage of Internet) to admire themselves and shout their presence from”. The effect of these is the exaggerated tone it creates. It makes her biased view so opinionated that it even seems ridiculous, making readers expect her change in opinion.