The song I chose for the song explication is “Piece by Piece” by Kelly Clarkson. Kelly’s singing career started when she won American Idol in 2002. Since then Kelly has produced major hits that get stuck in your head and you can’t help but sing along. Though her song “Piece by Piece” is one of my favorite songs she has ever produced. Kelly opens up about her relationship with her father to her fans and the world. With Kelly’s emotional attachment to “Piece by Piece,” it makes a great song with a narrative background. In an article “Kelly Clarkson: Her Heartbreaking Relationship With Her Biological Father Revealed” by Emy LaCroix it talked about Kelly’s past and how she didn’t have the best childhood growing up due to her parents divorcing. …show more content…
One example of figurative language is repetition. Although there were multiple lines of repetition the one that stood out the most was “piece by piece” which was featured in the most important parts of the song, which is the title of the song, part of the chorus and the bridge. One line in the song is “But piece by piece, he collected me” (line 7) which is part of the chorus. She is talking about how her father left her in pieces and her husband is the one who put her back together. Another important part is “Piece by piece, he restored my faith” (line 14). Her husband was the one to show her how a true man should act and how a good father should be, unlike Kelly’s own …show more content…
In the song, it said, “Piece by piece I fell far from the tree” (line 35). This use of metaphor I almost didn’t catch, until I looked at the lyrics closer and thought more about them. This line is comparing Kelly to her father. What help make the comparison is the saying “the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree”. Kelly is saying she isn’t like her dad and won’t abandon her child when she needs her the most. She is beating all odds that she will turn out like her father and is throwing the apple out far away. Kelly Clarkson hasn’t grown up with the fairytale story. Her father abandoned her when she was six after a bad divorce went done between her parent. Since then she has struggled to deal with the burden her father left with her. Though, that all changed when she won American Idol and became a well-known singer. She wasn’t just showing the world how good she was she was proving to her father that she can make it without him in her
Bruce Springsteen’s song American skin. In the relation to the story, it is a interesting song, it is about weapons, and there will never be justice, as long as there a guns in the world, and this has much relation with the story. He also sings about how easy it is to people, it could be a dad or husband, how it the family handle the situation when the most important person leaves them.
Figurative language is used when she is describing how people age. Such as, “Because the way you grow old is kind of like an onion or like the rings inside a tree trunk or like my little wooden
I chose this song because, in my opinion, it has a good thesis that backs up the song lyrics and it gives you a positive feeling. Basically, the song is telling us to always keep our faith and stay strong no matter what. It encourages people to
In chapter one of the novel, Anthem, by Ayn Rand, the author incorporates figurative language to develop the characters and the setting. The first example that portrays figurative language is, “The walls are cracked and water runs upon them in thin threads without sound, black and glistening as blood.” This example uses a metaphor to compare the water on the walls to glistening blood. In return, the readers can get a visual of the rooms setting and what the walls look like. Another example from chapter one is, “Their hair was white and their faces were cracked as the clay of a dry river bed.”
A great example of figurative language was on page 37, “We were withered trees in the heart of the desert”. This is one of the many metaphors the author uses throughout the text to give the reader a visual representation. He compared the Jews to withered trees to show how exhausted and drained they were. Instead of saying, “they were exhausted”, which is just a broad
Authors use figurative language to describe the objects and characters in the stories. In the passage “Uncle Timothy’s Ships,” by Summer Woodford, figurative language reveals the significance of the bottled ships, Woodford reveals the significance of the bottled ships by using metaphors, extended metaphors, and personification. The first piece of figurative language that Summer Woodford uses are metaphors. A metaphor is to compare two things without using like or as.
In this section of The Glass Castle, Jeannette and her family move into a house that is in desperate need of TLC, depicted by the authors use of figurative language. One example that demonstrates the use of figurative language is “The front, including a drooping porch, butter precariously into the air, supported by tall, spindly cinder-block pillars” (Walls). In this example from the passage, Walls
There is also figurative language used in phrases such as “Having come from the clouds” and “tilting road”. This adds to the effect of imagery and emphasis on the journey to the sawmill town. It also helps to make the stanza more interesting to the reader.
Figurative language is a main component in showcasing the emotions the characters reveal. An example being when the author writes “ The children huddled up to her and breathed like little calves waiting at the bars in the twilight.” This portrays the children's emotions with more emphasis and really shows how they watched everything Granny Weatherall did with precision. This type of writing really helps the reader understand what is going on within the characters and their actions. The author also displays figurative language in the way she describes how John would be in the situation of them still being together. She describes him as being more of a child, rather than taking a parent role.
The first example is, “America was where all my mother's hopes lay.” She is saying that her mother believes that america is a great place and all her hopes in dreams can be achieved there, it makes me feel like america is the best place to be kinda a happy mood. The second example is, “I was like the Christ child lifted out of the straw manger, crying with holy indignity.” This helps me understand the tone by showing me how she feels about herself in that moment. The final example is, “It felt like worms and toads and slimy things crawling out of my chest, but it also felt good, that this awful side of me had surfaced, at last.” This shows me the tone by describing how gross and terrible she felt in that moment and what it was like for her. In the book Two kinds this shows a lot of examples of figurative language.
When I look up the meaning of metaphors in Webster it says "a figure of speech in which a work for one idea or thing is used in place of another to suggest a likeness between them." The Hours by Michael Cunningham is enriched with many complex metaphors. While intertwining three different woman's lives, Cunningham uses a wide range of metaphors to help mean something in one story and tie into the next woman's story. Using deconstructive interpretation to investigate these strategically placed metaphors can be difficult and exciting, yet challenging.
Figurative language can be used to develop different themes within writing. Elie Wiesel uses figurative language to show his theme of hopelessness in his memoir, Night. For instance, he writes, “They passed me by, one after the other, my teachers, my friends. … Some of whom I had once feared, some of whom I had found ridiculous,” (Wiesel 17). This repetition definitely shows the feeling of hopelessness that he must have had during this time.
Linda Pastan’s poem, To a Daughter Leaving Home, is represented as a metaphor because it’s comparing the bike ride to the relationship between the mother and daughter. The author describes the mother going along side her eight year old daughter as she rides her bicycle (Pastan 915). The daughter “wobbled away” (Pastan 915). This happens to be an example of imagery because it gives a visual description of how the daughter was riding her bike. As she rides the bike further along, the mother gets surprised by the way the daughter seemed to be in control of the bike as she goes down a “curved path of the park” (Pastan 915).
Starting with figurative language, you find a hyperbole. The example is when one person at the stand shouts, "'Kill him! Kill the umpire!'" It's hyperbole because he doesn't want him to literally be killed. What makes it humorous is that some readers may find it funny for someone to yell, "Kill him," at a baseball game. The example for rhyming is when the stragglers thought about betting on Casey. The author wrote, "They thought, 'If only Casey could
Furthermore, this poem heavily uses a mixture of literal and figurative imagery. One of my favourite examples of imagery in this poem was “hands reaching out / fists raising up / banners unfurling / megaphones booming” (Jetñil-Kijiner 62-65). This quote allows the reader to imagine the protests and the movements that people are trying to do in order to save the planet. That was a case of extremely powerful and inspiring literal imagery as it shows people’s fight for change. This is an example of people who are fighting to save the planet for not only the current generation but for future generations as well. There are also several examples of figurative imagery, the most prominent is personification. An example of personification is “they say [the lagoon] will gnaw at the shoreline / chew at the roots of your breadfruit trees / gulp down rows of your seawalls / and crunch your island’s shattered bones” (12-15). In this example, it is talking about the repercussions of climate change and what the future will look like if people do not change. The use of personification helps the reader understand the awful things that can