Fires in the Mirror Literary Elements

Fires in the Mirror Literary Elements

Genre

A play

Language

English

Setting and Context

Set in 1991 in Brooklyn

Narrator and Point of View

An anonymous third-person narration

Tone and Mood

Apprehensive, chilling, vehement, heart-breaking, disturbing

Protagonist and Antagonist

The central character is Anonymous Young Man 1

Major Conflict

The conflict emerges when a motorcade group of the Jewish driving in Crown Heights kills an African American boy. Black people protest, and they kill an innocent Jewish man to get revenge. The riot between the two groups erupts, and the results are chaotic.

Climax

The climax comes when the riots become blow out of proportion. The reader realizes that the groups involved in the rioting express their frustrations because they are both racially discriminated in America.

Foreshadowing

Racial discrimination prefigures the hatred between the Blacks and the Jews.

Understatement

Violence is underestimated in the play. For instance, during the protest, lives are lost, and property is destroyed.

Allusions

The play alludes to racial discrimination and the frustrations of the people who are genealogically segregated.

Imagery

The images of race, ethnicity and injustice are all over the play to depict sight to the audience.

Paradox

The main paradox is that after a Jews' motorcade kills the African American boy, the Black people turn up to revenge, and they end up killing an innocent Jew.

Parallelism

There is parallelism between the riot’s intentions and the outcome.

Personification

The violence is personified as futile.

Use of Dramatic Devices

N/A

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