Blog #1
9/12/19 –
Anling Chen PD 1
Aim: How does Cormac McCarthy use style and syntax to create setting
and develop meaning?
Notes: Syntax, Diction, Dialogue, McCarthy’s devices
·
Syntax
in The Road
o
Today,
we discussed in our groups various devices used The Road to convey various themes. We all agreed that the syntax
played a large factor in how McCarthy was effective in painting such a bleak,
pessimistic world. McCarthy employed syntax in an interesting way –
straightforward sentences with few commas, the occasional period, and
absolutely no colons or semicolons. Sparsity mirrored the conditions of the
novel’s post-apocalyptic life: no energy spent on non-necessities and only
focusing on what is needed. The flow of the sentences contained few pauses or
breaks for thought just as the characters felt slivers of hope among an ocean
of despair and zero sight of light at the end of the tunnel.
·
Diction
o
McCarthy’s
choice of diction followed the same thread as the syntax. Straightforward
adjectives like “cold” and “dark” left no room for interpretation. It was cold
and it was dark. And that’s all. The father and the son faced on their journey
only immediate problems. The diction wasn’t so complicated that the reader had
to check in a dictionary for its meaning. There was no time for such extraneous
problems.
·
Dialogue
o
In
addition to only occasional quotation marks, McCarthy largely utilized three general
statements of dialogue (paraphrased):
§ “I’m scared”
§ “Okay”
§ “We’re the good guys, right?”
o
Any other
dialogue that would be about, for example, what they think about sports, would
be unnecessary, inappropriate (they’re halfway to death), and disrupt the flow.
·
McCarthy
(didn’t) use other strange devices
o
He
didn’t give names to characters to not let the reader forget that could be you.
Also because names don’t matter when the biggest fear is whether you can feed
your son tomorrow.
o
After
analyzing the Robert Frost poem, “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening,” we
students also realized that McCarthy didn’t follow an exact timeline with a
beginning, middle, and end. It seemed that without chapter markings or a major climax,
the father and son looked to be on an endless journey south – a south that
doesn’t exist. While the poem explained context (marveling at nature with a
horse), The Road gave no explanation
for the collapse of society. It gives you the result: a warning.
Reflection:
I really enjoyed
today’s discussion about devices. McCarthy’s writing is so unique and presented
his scenarios in a way that makes the reader think after the book, rather than
in between plot points or chapters. Rather, the whole book is supposed to be
like a horror movie. You don’t pause a horror movie, take a snack break, then
come back and get the whole intended effect of the movie. It’s supposed to be
consumed then resonate after the fact. I think this is why the book was so short.
You can read it in a day and get the point. Without thinking about how we’re
using our resources, one day we will run out and the world will fall into a
cold, dark pit. Learning about how this author relayed this theme, I feel, will
help me in my persuasive writing. Acclaimed fiction does not have to contain a
hundred SAT words, a sentence the length of a whole page, or defined character
development. Devices are meant to be molded to fit your purpose, whatever that
may be.
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