The Explorer's Daughter
- Created by: SarahM39
- Created on: 18-03-18 09:34
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- The Explorer's Daughter
- AUDIENCE
- Written for Parents,Young adults and Teenagers
- Use of intellectual language to describe the whales
- AUDIENCE
- "dead of winter"
- METAPHOR - weaker settingthe tone is ominous and there is the sense of place and danger
- LANGUAGE
- The Explorer's Daughter
- AUDIENCE
- Written for Parents,Young adults and Teenagers
- Use of intellectual language to describe the whales
- AUDIENCE
- "..butter-gold.."
- METAPHOR: shows a sense of wealth
- "..shifting light.
- is Poetical
- “..clustered..”
- ADJECTIVE: powerful connotation, it means that the women are scared so they huddle together and try to comfort each other.
- “It was like watching a cast, waterborne game with the hunters spread like a net around the sound”.
- This sentence is imagery. It has added adverbs to show how scared the women were and how much their husbands are important in their life.
- "... gently picked up his harpoon"
- thought and care, focus on the actual hunt and the text also switches back to the hunters.
- "... two heads and one bladder"
- not high-tech technology, limited, she respects them because they are using a harpoon, she is sympathetic to the narwhal and the hunters, dramatic.
- "...to dive, to leave, to survive"
- TRIAD
- "The dilemma stayed..."
- This shows that she's not that sure who to be sympathetic for, the narwhal or the hunters but her sympathy gets switched back to the hunters un this paragraph.
- "How can you possibly eat seal?"
- is a view point of society this shows that the modern person thinks that this is a crime.
- BUILDS UP AN ARGUMENT
- use every part of the animal" - so theres no waste/leftov
- "imported goods can only ever account for..."
- "do not kill for sport"
- The Explorer's Daughter
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