Doris Lessing: Stories Literary Elements

Doris Lessing: Stories Literary Elements

Genre

Short stories

Setting and Context

"The Black Madonna" takes place in Zambesia.

Narrator and Point of View

Third-person narrators

Tone and Mood

Sympathetic, heart-breaking, astonishing, resignation, and judgemental.

Protagonist and Antagonist

Girls are protagonists in “The Adventurous girls.” White parents are antagonists in “The Old Chief Mshlanga.”

Major Conflict

Racism in “The Old Chief Mshlanga”

Murder in “Nuisance”

Climax

The miraculous blossoming of the flowers in "The Black Madonna”

Foreshadowing

Gideon foreshadows the fates of the children based on their races.

Understatement

The farmer understates the value of human beings when he categorizes them as things that ought to be shot by Jonas in “The Pig.”

Allusions

Historical allusions such as Stalin.
Allusions to racism (‘The Old chief Mshlanga’).

Imagery

Images of the aftermath of World War II in "The Eye of God in Paradise" depict deep-rooted trauma and suffering.

Paradox

The productivity of ‘barren soils’ in Zambesia is paradoxical.

Parallelism

N/A

Metonymy and Synecdoche

“The Black Madonna” denotes a miracle similar to that of the Biblical Virgin Mary.

Personification

In “The Pig”, pigs are personified to represent human beings who are among trespassers.

The guinea fowl is personified in “Traitors.”

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