The Middleman and Other Stories Literary Elements

The Middleman and Other Stories Literary Elements

Genre

a collection of short stories

Setting and Context

Place: various through the stories, includes: USA, Canada, India, Germany; Time: towards the end of 20th century

Narrator and Point of View

In some stories the narrator is third-person omniscient while in others the narrator is the main character first-person.

Tone and Mood

Tone: questioning, speculative
Mood: depressed, contemplative

Protagonist and Antagonist

Protagonists vary through the stories, but it could be summed up to the protagonist being immigrants in western world; Antagonist: struggles that come with being an immigrant

Major Conflict

Immigrants, mostly from India or Middle East, coming to America (or western countries) in search of a better life

Climax

Immigrants accepting the new way of life; in "A Wife's Story" the process of this acceptance is beautifully described with insults to the culture they came from being a part of that

Foreshadowing

N/A

Understatement

In the story "The Tenant" Maya understates the intentions of her creepy tenant. She believes that he has a sort of perverse hatred for her but it turns out that he only wants her out because he is ready to remarry.

Allusions

Allusions to English poets: In the story "Buried Lives" allusion to Matthew Arnold; in the story "Fighting for the Rebound" allusion to William Butler Yeats.

Imagery

Imagery of clothing

Paradox

N/A

Parallelism

"First you don't exist.
Then you're invisible.
Then you're funny.
Then you're disgusting."

Metonymy and Synecdoche

N/A

Personification

"Where did America go? I want to know. Down the rabbit hole, Doc Healy used to say. Alice knows, but she took it with her."

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