ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos

American Literature: Paradox and Hyperbole 15582 Views


Share It!


Description:

Figurative language: for when you want to say something without actually, literally saying what you mean. A favorite of Jewish mothers and passive-aggressive boyfriends everywhere.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:02

Paradox and hyperbole

00:18

I'm the figure of speech that's right well here's the deal sometimes you write [Man wearing colorful t-shirt speaking]

00:23

really sweet papers that you just know will make your teachers brain implode

00:28

with awesomeness and sometimes you don't what's the difference and how can you

00:32

write more papers that are the brain imploding type with figurative language

00:36

that's how and also with correct citations, proper structure, a compelling

00:41

topic but those are issues for other days anywho figurative language [Big book of figurative language appears]

00:46

specifically what are paradoxes and hyperbole well two of the many types of

00:51

figurative language that when used correctly can really make writing pop [American football pumped up and pops]

00:55

well there's no guarantee that using figurative language will make your paper

00:59

get an A+ but it sure doesn't hurt.. So we're all on the same page when I say

01:03

figurative language I'm talking about language writers use to describe

01:07

something in a story or poem without literally stating what they're trying to

01:10

say think about this which is more interesting sentence A - The red truck drove [Red truck driving down a road]

01:14

down the road or sentence B - The red truck screamed fastest like a rocket

01:19

launched by a madman the second sentence is not only more fun to read it paints a

01:24

way more interesting image in your mind and that's what well-placed figurative [Man thinking about a fast red truck driving by]

01:29

language is all about it takes ordinary sentences descriptions or passages and

01:34

makes them extraordinary well of course writers have to be

01:37

careful about going overboard with the figurative language too much of the good [Man throws another man off a ship]

01:40

stuff can overwhelm a piece and make it challenging to read which is no good at

01:44

all don't be that person there are a lot of

01:47

different types of figurative language so we've narrowed it down to just two

01:50

for our intents and purposes here time to get up close and personal with [Man hugging paradox and hyperbole]

01:54

paradox and hyperbole....Well let's talk paradox first a paradox is a

01:59

statement that seems to contradict itself but it's actually true what?

02:04

backup the bus paradoxes are everywhere and when you [Boy selling paradox candy and man approaches the stand]

02:08

know how to identify them you'll start noticing them all around you take this

02:12

example bittersweet when we say something is bittersweet it usually

02:16

means that the thing had both awesomeness and terribleness about it

02:20

like seeing your best friend in a new relationship here happy for your pal but

02:24

it still stinks that you'll be spending more time alone [Man watches friend with his girlfriend]

02:27

Or how about this one I'm nobody famous 19th century poet Emily

02:32

Dickinson wrote a poem with a paradoxical title I'm nobody

02:36

who were you now that was a poet who knew her figurative language stuff when

02:41

you think about this statement I'm nobody you see that it contradicts [Man sitting alone on a park bench]

02:44

itself a person can't be nobody because everyone is somebody right writers use

02:49

paradox to intentionally focus their reader's attention onto a single detail

02:53

and think about it in a new way if they can make their readers pause over [Man reading with a magnifying glass]

02:57

something they've written they're guilty of expanding the brains of those who

03:01

read their work mind blown paradox shows up in loads of famous

03:06

literature and poetry....Old Willie Shakespeare was notorious for using

03:10

paradox he loved the stuff in Romeo and Juliet he wrote the earth that's

03:14

nature's mother is her tomb what is her burying grave that is her womb. These

03:22

lines create a paradox because of the manner in which they present a [Shakespeare's poem stamped with paradox]

03:25

contradictory idea that the earth is both a place of birth and death this

03:29

might seem a little weird but when you think about it it's true the earth is a

03:32

place of both birth for trees flowers and plants and death for people we put

03:37

into coffins and bury them in the ground another awesome Shakespearean example of

03:42

paradox is a often recited line from Hamlet I must be cruel only to be kind

03:48

this pretty much sounds like the silly ramblings of some complete idiot right [Hamlet on stage]

03:52

well yes and no sure we could write Willie's titular character off as a

03:57

nutjob but since we know a bit about Shakespeare and how masterfully he used

04:01

language we'll give him a skosh more credit than that line above is Hamlet

04:05

speaking about his mom and how he's going to get revenge in order to even [Hamlet speaking with his Mum]

04:09

the score when it comes to the issue of his father's death

04:12

aha now the line starts to make more sense because his Mum is now married to

04:17

the dude who offed his pops killing him will feel pretty good too Hamlet but Mom's

04:21

gonna be heartbroken it's a paradox if we've ever seen one

04:25

slightly more contemporary novelist George Orwell also deployed paradox in

04:30

his books in his political satire Animal Farm Orwell wrote all animals are equal

04:35

but some are more equal than others on the surface this is just a ridiculous [Statement from Animal Farm poem]

04:39

statement how can all animals be equal if some are more equal well in the

04:44

context of the overall story this is a fine example of paradox the government

04:48

loves to tell animals that they're all equal makes them feel better about [Animals together reading the commandments]

04:51

themselves it's just what the government does but when it comes down to reality

04:55

simply isn't true some of the animals have more power and/or talent than the

05:00

others which creates an equality differential in itself it's pretty

05:04

likely that Orwell was expressing his personal feelings about government in

05:08

this book and particularly what paradoxical statements like that one

05:11

like I said once you understand what paradox means and what it can look like

05:15

you'll start seeing it all over the place [Man waiting at bus stop and paradox bus arrives]

05:18

time to move on down the figurative language line and examine another fine

05:21

specimen what's up there hyperbole... I know you've just been dying

05:27

to know more about this figure of speech and with good reason once you're

05:31

familiar with hyperbole you're gonna use it in every single paper you'll ever [Girl writing hyperbole multiple times on piece of paper]

05:34

write from now until the end of time perhaps that was an exaggeration or an

05:38

example of hyperbole see hyperbole is a total extreme over-the-top exaggeration

05:44

it's stretching the truth until it practically breaks into and even though [Person stretching the truth and the word snaps]

05:48

hyperbole shouldn't be taken literally it's used by writers when they want to

05:53

really accentuate something in writing think of it this way instead of saying

05:57

it was very very very very cold you could say it was so cold that the

06:01

Penguins were wearing snow suits and tears came out as icicles well that [Man crying icicles]

06:05

certainly took things up a notch here's another example that you've probably

06:08

said at least one time in your life especially if you have younger siblings

06:12

or meddling parents I've already told you a million times did you actually say [Mother telling her son off]

06:17

something a million times well no way that would take forever this would be a

06:21

hyperbolic statement you'd make when you feel that you've had to repeat the same

06:25

information over and over and over again and are sick of repeating yourself while

06:28

hyperbole like paradox runs all over literature in the classic American [Hyperbole and paradox running away from a man]

06:32

folktale Paul Bunyan the main character is always using hyperbole to tell

06:36

stories and that's not an exaggeration a well-loved line from Paul Bunyan is a

06:40

perfect example here Well now, one winter it was so cold that all

06:44

the geese flew backward and all the fish moved south and even the snow turned

06:49

blue late at night it got so frigid that all spoken words froze solid before they

06:55

could be heard people had to wait until sunup to find out what folks were

06:59

talking about the night before.... all right come on now Paul

07:03

it's common for writers to use hyperbole to express emotions or physical feelings [Person scribbling on paper and a man with face in his hands]

07:07

like temperature, pain and love and yes love can be a physical feeling another

07:13

literary example of hyperbole is in Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird...Lee

07:17

describes the setting like so people moved slowly then there was no hurry for

07:22

there was nowhere to go nothing to buy and no money to buy it with nothing to

07:26

see it outside the boundaries of Macomb County.. well unless Macomb County is on

07:31

[Astronaut bouncing on a planet] some faraway planet we've yet to explore Lee is being hyperbolic in describing it

07:36

this place may feel like the center of the universe for the residents but

07:40

clearly this is an exaggeration of the truth so there you have it

07:43

paradox and hyperbole are impressive tools when you know how to wield them

07:47

correctly in your writing like most anything too much of these tools can

07:51

lessen the quality of writing instead of accentuating it and making it memorable

07:54

or even publishable sprinkle figurative language throughout your writing [List of figurative examples appear on screen]

07:58

whenever you feel like now it might help make a better point or describe

08:02

something better or ask your readers to stop and think about what you're trying

08:06

to say you can even bring some examples of paradox and hyperbole in your spare

08:10

time and shove those puppies into your stories at a later date yep that was an [Man gets off paradox bus and puppy runs away]

08:14

example of figurative language don't really shove puppies...

08:17

nobody likes a puppy shover...

Up Next

Catching Fire (Part 2)
6719 Views

“Happy Hunger Games!” Or not. Katniss’s Hunger Games experiences left a not-so-happy effect on her. This video will prompt you to ponder if...

Related Videos

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
47687 Views

Who's really the crazy one in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest? Shmoop amongst yourselves.

Edgar Allan Poe: The Twilight Connection
3322 Views

Sure, Edgar Allan Poe was dark and moody and filled with teenage angst, but what else does he have in common with the Twilight series?

El Gran Gatsby
866 Views

¿Por que es el 'Gran' Gatsby tan gran? ¿Porque de su nombre peculiar? ¿Porque de el misterio que le rodea? Se ha discutido esta pregunta por muc...

Fahrenheit 451
84302 Views

Would would the world be like without books? Ray Bradbury tackles that question—and many more— in Fahrenheit 451. Go ahead; read it on your Kin...