The Splendid and the Vile Literary Elements

The Splendid and the Vile Literary Elements

Genre

Non Fiction

Setting and Context

London, during World War II, from the first day of Winston Churchill's Prime Ministerial career

Narrator and Point of View

The point of view is always Churchill's.

Tone and Mood

Threatening, ugly, evil, courageous, triumphant, defiant

Protagonist and Antagonist

Churchill is the protagonist; Adolf Hitler is the antagonist

Major Conflict

World War II is the major conflict, but the specific conflict in the book is the Blitz, a series of aerial attacks on London

Climax

Churchill's alliance with Roosevelt and the way in which he persuaded the American president to join the war

Foreshadowing

Hitler's invasion of Belgium and Holland that coincided with Churchill's first day in office foreshadows the lack of respect the German leader had for any other nation and his defiance in the face of a new alliance-making Prime Minister.

Understatement

N/A

Allusions

The title of the book alludes to an observation made in John Colville's journal after a particularly heavy fall of bombs over his home.

Imagery

The book's imagery is very violent, and like the title, sometimes beautiful, in that the destruction caused on the ground is in contradiction to the beauty of the bomb's lights that illuminate the sky. The imagery for the most part emphasizes the destrucion caused in London during the Blitz.

Paradox

In his meetings with Roosevelt, Churchill emphasized why America needed Britain as an ally, rather than emphasizing how much he needed an alliance with Roosevelt.

Parallelism

There is a parallel between Churchill, who chooses to stay in London during the Blitz, and the people he is governing.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

Londoners refers to all of the British people living in London who suffered loss during the bombings.

Personification

N/A

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