H Is for Hawk Literary Elements

H Is for Hawk Literary Elements

Genre

Memoir

Setting and Context

The action takes place over the course of a year at the narrator's home.

Narrator and Point of View

The action in the memoir is told from the perspective of a first-person subjective point of view.

Tone and Mood

The tone and mood is a desperate one.

Protagonist and Antagonist

The protagonist is Helen and the antagonist is death.

Major Conflict

The major conflict is between the inevitability of death and a person's will to live.

Climax

The memoir reaches its climax when Helen tames Mabel.

Foreshadowing

The death of Helen's father is used here to foreshadow later instances in which the narrator will have to face difficult situations in her life.

Understatement

When the narrator claims that everything will be better once she tames Mabel is an understatement because the narrator is still unable to come to terms with the grief caused by her father's death.

Allusions

One of the main allusions found here is the idea that a person can only find peace by returning back to nature.

Imagery

One of the most important imageries is that of the narrator sitting in her room alone after she learned of her father's death. This image is important because it shows just how much death can affect a person and how it can destroy one's self-confidence.

Paradox

N/A

Parallelism

A parallel is drawn between the hawk the narrator trains and the narrator herself. This parallel is an important one because it is used to transmit the idea that happiness stems primarily from a rupture from nature. Because of this, humans will always be unhappy while animals will always be happy.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

The hawk is used here as a general term to make reference to a person's desire to move on and succeed in life.

Personification

We have a personification in the sentence "the trees embraced me as a mother would".

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