Letter 22 Rhetorical Analysis

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1. Screwtape is angry at Wormwood for reporting him to the police. 2. The girl that the patient is interested in is a devoted Christian. This is what “horrifies” Screwtape. The girl and her family are such great Christians that there aroma rubs off on anyone that enters their home. Screwtape calls this the “deadly odour” that is in her family. 3. Screwtape has found out that the girl with whom the patient is in love with is ignorant. Screwtape advises Wormwood to exploit this flaw by having the patient imitate the flaw. 4. At the end of Letter 22, Screwtape turns into a centipede. This causes Screwtape’s secretary, Toadpipe to the finish the letter. 5. “The horror of the Same Old Thing” is we get tired of certain things and want something more.
Analysis:
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Two examples of irony in Letter 22 are seen when Screwtape calls God a hedonist and when Wormwood tried to get Screwtape in trouble. These examples are ironic because God is not a hedonist and Wormwood got a different result from what he was hoping would happen to Screwtape. 8. Noise for Screwtape represents hell for us. I associate noise with unpleasant sounds that cause disturbances. Music does not play a role in my spiritual life. I prefer complete silence and tranquility. Silence and tranquility allows me to concentrate and get things accomplished in a timely manner. 9. Screwtape thinks awareness of Christianity’s social implications is a bad thing because it allows for the advancement of personal virtue, character, and things the patient is able to control. This would ruin what Screwtape and Wormwood have been working on with the patient. Such awareness can be corrupted by drawing attention to the idea that Christianity began going wrong and departing from the doctrine of the Founder, at a very early stage. This can clear away accretions and perversions. Some examples of good institutions or movements that have suffered this fate include: the American Psychological Association and the Anti-Apartheid

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