Sunday, October 13, 2013

Romeo and Juliet Article



Romeo and Juliet
Don’t bite your thumb on it.
By Dana Stevens

The first thing that I noticed about this article was the title, it states “Romeo and Juliet, Don’t bite your thumb on it.” Just by reading the title you can already see that the author has a negative opinion on the new movie Romeo and Juliet. The second thing that I noticed in the article is that it is actually quite entertaining. I enjoy the way Stevens gets her opinion across.

Diction: Stevens uses diction to get her point across very effectively.  She uses words like “lush” and “bodice-ripper” in the first sentence; these are not words that are usually associated with describing a movie. It seems like the author is using the words in a good way but than in the second sentence she says, “without big stars or a modern interpretive concept” setting up that the words “lush” and “bodice-ripper” are being used in a mocking way.  There are also some other weird uses of diction that add to the piece like “petulant” and “impetuousness” which I think she added to make herself look as though still a reliable author and opinion even though the article is quite critical. A pattern that I noticed in the diction was she repeatedly describes Juliet as young, she says, “babyish features”, “childlike”, and “youthful”.  Stevens even uses a French word, “mélange” which translates to mixture to add some variety to the word choice.

Syntax:  I noticed that the author starts some sentences with conjunctions such as “And Lesley Manville..” and also “But it’s Paul Giamatti…” to make relationships between ideas and to create a smooth rhythm in the paragraph. The author also uses syntax to create the criticism of Romeo and Juliet in a humorous tone. She writes sentences like, “Steinfeld has an open, childlike quality that’s well suited for showcasing Juliet’s youthful impetuousness and idealism, but she doesn’t quite pull off the transformation to tragic heroine, occasionally sounding a petulant Valley Girl note that I doubt was intended.”  The last section of the sentence solidifies the fact that the author does not find the movie to be very impressive and states her opinion in a humorous and mocking way.

Details: There are many examples of when the author added specific details to add to the article. One of the details she uses is when she says, “Valley Girl note” which is important because she could use many other different descriptions but she chose “Valley Girl”. When she is talking about Juliet’s lines in the movie Stevens says, “It doesn’t help Steinfeld either, that many of Juliet’s best speeches are either cut entirely or pared down to the bare bones…” when she ads in “bare bones” in the end I think that is an interesting word choice but it’s also an important detail because it explains how in the movie they don’t give justice to Shakespeare’s play.

5 comments:

  1. Kate,
    Great job with your close reading, I can see that you take a great deal of time to sort out your ideas and talk about them with substantial evidence to back them up. I do have a few concerns about your post. Try avoid using first person in your post, it makes it seem a bit informal for a close reading. You seem to lack a conclusion. Adding a conclusion can just help the reader wrap up all the ideas. Also the most important thing is you lack a thesis for the paper to go off on. Your body paragraphs are great, your interpretations have solid meaning behind them, but without a thesis this close reading is not complete.

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  2. Kate,
    I enjoyed reading your take on this article, and I thought that you did a good job of recognizing the techniques that Stevens used and supporting them with sufficient evidence. I will caution you against making this essay so informal; though it is a blog post, the guidelines say that it should take the form of an essay. Your observations are 100% legitimate but it would be better to take out the first-person voice. Your introduction was good in that you described the meaning of the piece, but it would definitely benefit from a nice, strong thesis. In the third paragraph, I think that you mixed up diction and details by discussing the word choice of "bare bones." Since we read the same article, I was wondering what you thought about the details that were used. Do you think that they were tailored to a certain audience? Did you find any

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    1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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    2. details that offered a positive spin on the movie? (sorry it got cut off)

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  3. Kate--You don't begin with a clear thesis, which makes me think there's going to be trouble as I start to look to see if you've improved from last month when your peer reviewers identified issues with inaccuracies in your analysis and unclear warrants. And in fact, I see that these are still problems here. You're really just pointing at things--tour guiding.

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