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Aktuelle Version vom 25. April 2022, 18:20 Uhr
Reading and Marking
IRONY
- Types of Irony and their Functions
 
- verbal irony: express something by saying the opposite
 
- ⇒ effect: reader enjoys finding irony, discovers real meaning and contrast between what is said and what is meant
 
Oh thank you VERY MUCH for not inviting me to the party!
- dramatic irony: the reader or the audience know more than the characters
 
- ⇒ effect 1: readers feel superior, because they know more, only to be soon shown they are not ⇒ readers are taught a lesson
 - ⇒ effect 2: readers feel pity, find it hard to bear the tension and have to see the main character making fatal mistakes ... ⇒ involvement in story
 
In a play the characters listen to a man explaining enthusiastically that he will travel to the USA on board of an absolutely unsinkable ship - the Titanic!
- irony of situation: sharp contrast between what the characters/readers wish/intend and what real life/the situation is like.
 
An example would be a man who takes a step aside in order to avoid getting sprinkled by a wet dog, and falls into a swimming pool."
(Lars Elleström, Divine Madness. Bucknell Univ. Press, 2002)
Line of argument/argumentative structure
- describe what the author does (e.g. he puts forward his main thesis, he asks a question, he creates a contrast, he gives examples ...)
 - explain why he does it at this point ( ... in orfder to show/convince/underlien/defend ..)
 - show how he tries to do this effectively (rhetorical devices, argumentation ...)
 
STYLE
Aspects of Informal Style
- beginning a sentence with a conjunction (e.g. But, And, Or, So, Yet, Because)
 - contractions (e.g. can’t, won’t, doesn’t)
 - use of the word you
 - use of the imperative or command form (e.g. Watch this film.)
 - abbreviations (e.g. etc. instead of and so forth)
 - short sentences, and short paragraphs, paratactical structure
 - stories in the text that are too personal or too compelling
 - use of dialect, slang, informal or taboo expressions (kinda, kiddo, bugger, me mum an dad)
 - use of fillers like You know, er(m), well, kind of / kinda, yeah, uhm, actually, I mean, O.K.
 - ellipsis (I don't think we …. )
 
Aspects of Formal Style
- rather objective, non-personal point of view
 - no contractions or abbreviations
 - no use of imperatives
 - varied length of sentences and paragraphs. ==> Hypotactical structure
 - complete sentences
 - absence of fillers, dialect, slang etc.
 - use of latinate forms and technical terms rather than phrasal verbs (irrevocable, discover, arrive, reappear instead of impossible to take back, find out, get there, be there again)
 
