David Foster Wallace

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    The fictional story, “Good People”, written by David Foster Wallace is about a young couple facing a life-altering decision. Wallace writes with significant and detailed focus on the two characters, Lane Dean Jr. and Sheri. Imagery is seen significantly through this story as reader can picture a number of scenes in their minds as they follow the story. Extended metaphor is seen in both the title of the story as well as a small amount within the body. The title itself is named “Good People” which…

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    There are so many that love the person they are with, while other they do not know if they love that person they are with. Not only that, but who needs to love more than the other in a relationship. In the story “ Good People” by author David Foster Wallace he talks about a young highly devoted Christian couple that get news that one of them does not want to hear. This young couple is so in love until something unexpected happens. When Lane Dean Jr finds out his girlfriend is pregnant, he starts…

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    The essay, “Consider the Lobster”, written by David Foster Wallace is about him visiting the Maine Lobster Festival. He believes that the festival is more than about the food and entertainment. First, he goes into very specific details explaining the lobster. He stated, “Lobsters are both hunters and scavengers”, (page 2). I believe that the main purpose of the article is to tell people to look at reality and consider the lobster on what they have to go through to be cooked and eating. He…

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    their advancements humans forget at times that they are just a type of animal like all the other creatures that inhabit the planet earth. In “Consider the Lobster” by David Foster Wallace he pokes the reader to take a look at the way humans treat what is not only a source of nutrition but a source of festivity. Through, the eyes of Wallace the audience gets an inside view on the celebration of…

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    agree on, such as murder or taking another’s property is wrong, there are several rules that, from inside a community, seem immutable or common sense, but from the outside they are flippant, arbitrary, and restricted. In the story “Good People” David Foster Wallace uses the circumstances of an unplanned pregnancy to examine the social isolation that can occur inside of religious communities with strict and impossibly high standards of “goodness”, and the self hatred that occurs when those inside…

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    Water”, creative writer, David Foster Wallace outlines to Kenyon College graduates of 2005, the struggles that are out there in the world. David Foster Wallace is aware that as college graduates, they have never taken into consideration the deeper aspects of life most people are not mindful of when entering the real world. It seems that Wallace, by the end of the speech, hoped to have opened the minds of these graduates and aid them in coming to realization and reality. Wallace, although…

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    is one becoming an adult and making choices every day. David Foster Wallace uses "water" to symbolize life. During life, one thinks constantly, and a Liberal Arts education gives you the perspective of learning how to think. Without learning how to think, life becomes miserable, making it harder for one to be truly happy. The value of a liberal arts education is essential for not letting our thoughts control us. On a broader perspective, Wallace says that he is self-centered, in addition, he…

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    Indeed, it is highly likely that many contradict the real value of education. Many have different ways of thinking. In making this comment, Mike Rose and David Foster Wallace insist that the real value of education isn 't taught through book, but rather real life experiences. Even though Mike Rose and David Foster Wallace take two different approaches to the real value of real education they are actually in agreement about the important idea that real education has to do with awareness and…

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    they are about to read an uplifting and encouraging story that will change the reader’s life. However, the title is ironic, because the character is not a saint, in fact, they face with the taboo subject of teen pregnancy. In “Good People,” David Foster Wallace uses religion, symbolism, and cultural pressure to show Lane as a character who is unable to own his sin and forces his girlfriend to deal with it. First, Lane’s religious upbringing tortures him as he mulls over…

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    at the wrong time can completely change the meaning of the paper or article. David Foster Wallace and Paul Bloom both attempt to create a masterpiece. They both use incredibly charged language and all of their rhetorical choices are well placed. They know how to appeal to their targeted audience so much so that it comes down to only a few mistakes made by the other to decide which article is more rhetorically sound. David Wallace’s speech by far uses the right language at the right time, his use…

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