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Personification
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Personification is a literary device in which abstract concepts, objects, or non-human forces are given human qualities, behaviors, or voices. It appears across poetry, drama, prose fiction, and religious texts, making it a central subject in English composition, literary analysis, and rhetoric courses. The device carries genuine intellectual weight because it reveals how writers construct meaning—transforming ideas like death, evil, or justice into tangible presences that readers can engage with emotionally and critically. Works such as Shakespeare's Othello, Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray, Frost's "Out Out," and Kinnell's "After Making Love We Hear Footsteps" all use personification to animate themes that would otherwise remain abstract, making them rich sources for academic study.

Student papers on this topic approach personification from several directions. Literary explication essays closely analyze how a single poem or passage deploys the device, as seen in work on Frost and Kinnell. Character-focused essays examine figures like Iago as embodiments of evil, treating a human character as a personified abstraction. Comparative and thematic essays link texts across genres—connecting Morrison, Dunbar, and Miller through shared symbolic language, or tracing the personification of Satan across Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Rhetorical analyses, such as those focusing on Selzer's "The Knife," examine how personification functions as a persuasive and artistic strategy.

A strong essay on personification grounds its thesis in specific textual evidence, identifying not just where the device appears but what interpretive work it performs—how it shapes tone, advances theme, or positions the reader. Evidence drawn from close reading of language, imagery, and context carries the most weight. A common pitfall is treating personification as mere decoration; the strongest essays argue that it is structurally meaningful, showing how removing it would fundamentally alter a work's effect or argument.

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Paper High School
Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte
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Essay Doctorate
Critical evaluation of strategy as a keystone for minimizing organizational fraud
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Essay Doctorate
Privacy Does Not Love an Explores Darkness
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Essay Doctorate
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Essay Doctorate
20th Century American Literature
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Paper Undergraduate
Using Structure to Analyze Poetry
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Essay Masters
Two Minimalist Short Stories
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Paper Doctorate
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Essay Doctorate
An explication of the Lilies Landsford Canal poem
An explication of Susan Ludvigson's "The Lilies of Landsford Canal." Analysis includes how Ludvigson contemplates the narrator's mortality and how it compares to nature. Also analyzed are the role that literary devices such as imagery, allusion, personification, and simile play in this contemplation. The narrator explores how nature and man cannot coexist without destroying each other.
Paper Undergraduate
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