To Ms. Holmes and the three people who are going to be
reviewing this article; you will probably stifle a laugh, chuckle or maybe roll
your eyes. But come on! When i read some of my peer's articles about the
economy in Europe or a play or something that makes me *feel* like a zombie is
gnawing on my brain, it kills me. You can tell how painful it was for them. It
shows in the writing. So, i figured, maybe I'd write about something that I
find interesting so that it doesn't seem like I was having a bone rebroken as I
was writing it.
And lets face it, you'd rather read my article talking about
zombies than the BP oil spill or gay marriage.
__________________________
There are several times in our lives when we go through it
thinking about ourselves, how we feel while neglecting the views of others. In
the article 8 Zombie Apocalypse Survival
Strategies (For Zombies) by Chris Bucholz, we get the classical extinction
via cannibalism from the zombie's side of the story. Bucholz shows the everyday
zombie how to survive in a very entertaining way, using diction, language and
detail to grab the (decaying) reader's attention and bring home the point that
it is not impossible when the whole world is falling apart. Additionally,
Bucholz also relates the life of a zombie to the everyday livings of the
average human.
The diction of the article is very distinct; it lacks a
certain sympathetic tone, instead, it is replaced by a technical and objective inevitability.
The article begins with “The first thing you'll notice after zombification is
the Hunger.” Firstly, the term ‘zombification’ is used very casually like the
word puberty. By using this term, it gives a certainty to the possibility of
becoming a zombie. Additionally, the term “Hunger” is personified. Bucholz chooses
this word and makes it something like the first stage of “zombification” causes
the reader to realize how absolute the reality is and makes the reader feel like
a zombie. There are no pitiful reasoning, no apologies or condolences about being
turned into the undead, Bucholz attacks the survival of the zombie head on. By
using technicality of the wording, the writer is able to put seriousness in a rather
larger than life fantasy.
Bucholz uses language to bring the reader into the zombie apocalypse
by choosing a second person point of view. Again, this reiterates the
technicality of the article. Along with the point of view, the continuous usage
of methodological and mundane language, however, there is an underlying
humorous tone to the make believe article. There is much juxtaposition in the
language and detail of Bucholz’s article like “The rich zombies will get
richer, and if you can't be one of them, you'll want to at least be working for
one of them.” He often choses two very contrasting details and uses it to bring
to light the ‘humanity’ of being a zombie. You would think that in an apocalypse, being
rich or poor does not matter because it is survival that does but by bringing
the two contrasting ideas, Bucholz shows the irony of it all thereby creating
humor.
In this article, Bucholz uses diction, language and detail
to enrich the writing by showing the seriousness of the situation thereby
creating a funny and amusing article.
----
Again. The time constraints are killing me. The third paragraph
was rushed, can you tell?
Oh wow! This is definitely nothing like I have read before.
ReplyDeleteYour introduction was good! The whole essay flowed quite smoothly. Also, you did a great job with the topic sentences of each paragraph. No need to state that the third paragraph was rushed, since conclusions are usually only suppose to be a statement. Nice use of juxtaposition and how Bucholz creates humor and irony.
Overall, nice work.
I like how you connected each of the DIDLS techniques so smoothly in your paper. I also thought that it was interesting how you compared different examples of techniques, showing how humor was generated because of irony. I liked how you made a statement, such as in the first sentence of paragraph 2, and then used techniques to support your statement.
ReplyDeleteI would almost have more examples. For diction I would say that the word "zombification" is made up and that helps to add to the feeling of fiction-ness. Perhaps you could also talk a little more about the tone of the essay. I liked how you used DIDLS to prove a point. And YES I really do appreciate the humor of this article.
ReplyDeleteGood Job Tia!