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Explore the art of personification, giving human characteristics to objects or concepts, through examples and explanations. Learn how personification enhances descriptions, creates relatable imagery, and expands audience understanding. Discover the impact of personification in creating lively and imaginative portrayals.
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Personification It’s ALIVE!
Personification: Giving human characteristics to inanimate/nonhuman objects or concepts Example:The strange plants were basking in the sunshine, and now and then nodding gently to one another, as if in acknowledgement of sympathy • “Rappaccini’s Daughter” Nathaniel Hawthorne • Plants cannot bask, nod, acknowledge, or have sympathy
Personification: Showing imagery, animals, and ideas as having personalities and intelligence Example: Passion will choose his own time to rush upon the scene, and linger sluggishly behind when events would summon his appearance • “Rappaccini’s Daughter” Nathaniel Hawthorne • Passion doesn’t have gender nor can it decide
The purpose of personification • Personification creates meaning on human level • Humans interpret world through thoughts/emotions • Humans easily relate to thoughts and emotions • Personified descriptions, examples, and imagery more relatable for audience
Purpose of Personification • Enlivens descriptions/imagery • Allows inanimate objects/concepts to somewhat communicate a point of view • Allows audience to expand knowledge and understanding of descriptions
Impact of Personification • Personification creates lively and imaginative descriptions/images • Audience is not overwhelmed by long descriptive passages, but is instead entertained by them
One last example… Example: With each tick the clock handed him a glass of champagne, another of fine brandy, a cigar costing one guinea. The clock laid them on the table beside him as the ten minutes passed • “The Duchess and the Jeweler” Virginia Woolf