Zusammenfassung der Ressource
A passage to Africa
- Language to create atmosphere
by the use of imagery and by the
use of restore Al questions
pictures that companies want, TV
news.
- Line1: "hungry, lean, scared and betrayed faces"
- Line 7: "like a ghost village"
- Line 8: "most striking pictures"
- Line 10: "started our trip just a few days
before no longer impressed us much"
- Line: "60-61: "this smile had turned the tables
on the tacit agreement."
- Line 61-63: “uttering a single word, the
man had posed a question that cut to
the heart of the relationship between
me and him, between us and then,
between the rich world and the poor
world.”
- Line 66-67: “I resolved
there the. That I would
write the story of
Gufgaduud with all the
power and purpose I
could muster.”
- Line 71: “Meeting
him was a seminal
moment.”
- Structure to see how it's written by the use of
repetition to create effect
- Line 5-7: "Take the Badale Road for a
few kilometres till the end of the
tarmac, turn right on to a dirt track,
stay on it for about forty-five
minutes."
- Uses emotive
language to
despair
stereotypes.
So we feel
guilty,
invaded.
Language is
used so use
believe things.
- Line 12-13: “Pictures that
stun the editors.” “So
move people in the
comfort of their setting
rooms.
- Line 34: “The
degeneration of the
human body.”
- Line 58-30: “There is an unwritten code
between the journalist and his subjects
in these situations.” Reverse rolls. “The
journalist is active, the subject is
passive.
- Line 57: “deprivation.” Awful situation: - the simile that the man gave
the reporter that he was embarrassed of his aspect, but then the
reporter was embarrassed of not helping him, of being rich. Makes him
think how this affects his entire life. Makes him question himself and
turned the roles around when normally they would be, and not the
journalist. Line 67: “muster” get energy from something.