РефератыИностранный языкAnAn Analysis Of The Aspect Of Mood

An Analysis Of The Aspect Of Mood

In A Key Passage From Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s One Day In The Life Essay, Research Paper


The mood in any passage in literature is often


defined as the sentiments that are impressed upon the reader through the reading


of that passage. Evidently, considering the differing experiences of the


readers, the mood created in each will not be exactly the same. However, one can


consider certain universal elements in a passage which more than likely produce


a similar effect in most readers. This is the approach one must take if they are


to objectively analyse the mood created by an author in a key passage from one


of that author’s works. The selected passage from One Day In the Life of Ivan


Denisovitch contains such elements, of the kind which are likely to impress upon


most readers a certain mood. Such elements include the diction, or the careful


choice of words which, in description of people and events, have such


denotations and connotations as to inspire a certain feeling in a person, and


the which is contained within the passage. Each of these are capable of


providing a mood which is in stark contrast to the overriding tone of the entire


novel. This is the case in the selected passage, and the precise reason that it


is, in fact, a ‘key’ passage. Because its mood is an abberation from that of the


rest of the novel, an account of drudgery and of suffering, it is significant


for the ray of hope it lends to the reader who takes on the struggles of


Shukhov. It is the mood of this passage which, amidst a much darker picture


stands out as a light, lit by the elements of the passage which creates this


mood. The diction of the passage is a principal reason that it is able to impress


upon the reader a mood of excitement, of sentiment bordering on happiness, in a


setting which does not lend itself to such feelings. Such words that show


Shukhov’s intense focus on the task, taking a joy in his work and leaving all


other thoughts behind, are those which are the purveyors of the aforementioned


mood and the hope which follows. This focus and feeling on the part of Shukhov


is communicated in the passage whereby the descriptor “with zest” is added to


describe the his work. Even one without a complete understanding of the word


“zest” could be inspired by its presence in the text. To the human ear, the word


has such a sound that it very much fits the attitude which it describes. The


word could not suggest any mood other than that which is created within this


very passage. Other words found within the passage have similar effects, those


produced by the phonetic character of the word, but also by the denotation or


accepted meanin

g of the words. For example, the adjective “zealously”,


describing Shukhov’s chopping of the ice upon the wall, is quite like the word


“zest” in the mood which it suggests. Similarly, when “Shukhov tackled the wall


as if it was his own handiwork”, the excitement and intensity of the task is


effectively produced through the verb of the sentence. To tackle anything


suggests a certain vigor on the part of the tackler, a vigor that would be more


foreign in a prison camp than in any other setting that life provides. In such a


way as these words accomplish their tasks, diction becomes one of the most


effective means of impressing upon a reader a mood, or of suggesting certain


feelings to them. A very simple image is presented in this passage which also has a pronounced


effect upon the reader. It is “that distant view where sun gleamed on snow”


which can have a profound impression on anyone alert to that which they are


reading. The image which is formed is such that few readers would be unaffected


by it. The first element of the image is the sun. Unless the sun is portrayed as


being oppressive, as it might under a great deal of heat, it has no negative


connotations. Therefore, the only effect it might have upon the reader is a


positive one. That the sun should gleam on snow suggests a cold clear day, one


which can be exhilirating and cause one’s blood to rush. This exhiliration, like


Shukhov’s vigor, also does not seem be a very good fit to the setting of the


novel, which is partly what sets this passage apart. Essentially, what


Solzhenitsyn has done is to chose an image of the weather, which is so central


to the human experience that few would not feel the effects of the image in


their reading of the passage. If no such passage as this existed in this novel, perhaps less acclaim might


have fallen its way. Its inclusion reflects a certain genius on the part of the


author, who is able to make such stark contrast an effective tool in telling of


life in a Soviet prison camp. It is primarily the mood of the passage, that of


exhiliration, of excitement and of zest for life, which produces this contrast


with the rest of the novel, which mires more in depression and oppression. It


would seem that mood, indeed, can take hold of a reader, for nothing short of


that would inspire hope in a setting which provides a wholly bleak outlook. The


ability to impress upon the reader such a mood can truly be said to be part of


Solzhenitsyn’s genius and is telling of the overall value of One Day in the Life


of Ivan Denisovitch, which through its harsh realism and honesty, is a warning


of the brutality and cruelty of which we humans are capable.

Сохранить в соц. сетях:
Обсуждение:
comments powered by Disqus

Название реферата: An Analysis Of The Aspect Of Mood

Слов:1025
Символов:6258
Размер:12.22 Кб.