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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 Undergraduate
Richard Selzer\'s \"The Knife\" Richard
Richard Selzer's ability to juxtapose real life step-by-step surgical procedures with metaphor, irony, similes, personification and abstract language shows that not only does he fully understand the delicate, dangerous…
Paper Undergraduate
Hindu, Buddhist & Asian Art: Architecture and Figures
¶ … representation of the human figure in Hindu architecture. Cite specific examples in your answer.
Paper Undergraduate
African-American in the Third Chapter
In the third chapter of his book on African-American culture and the construction of self in fiction and autobiography, Robert Lee (67) notes that the 1960s is probably the decade of most significance for the…
Paper Undergraduate
Explication of Galway Kinnell's "After Making Love We Hear Footsteps"
¶ … Love We Hear Footsteps by Galway Kinnell
Paper Undergraduate
The civil rights movement in Tuskegee
There are several "hot spots" with regard to the civil rights movement and one that has been recognized as such is Tuskegee Alabama, for both its early entrance into the civil rights movement as well as its long history…
Paper Undergraduate
Isaiah Delivered the Jubilee Message
Isaiah delivered the Jubilee message to the people of God who are now free from captivity, restored, and exalted, culminated in the message of Jesus. This message, delivered in Isaiah 61:1-11, gives hope to the…
Paper Undergraduate
Women's roles in Oedipus the King and ancient Greek literature compared
Role of Women: Oedipus the King and Beowulf
Paper Undergraduate
Satan and Lucifer in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam
Since the very dawn of civilization, the battle between good and evil has been part of the mythology and interconnected philosophies of human beings. From the Epic of Gilgamesh to the battles between Egyptian Gods, to…
Paper Doctorate
Miller's Death of a Salesman, Morrison's Beloved, and Dunbar's Antebellum Sermon
Miller's Death of a Salesman, Morrison's Beloved, and Dunbar's "Antebellum Sermon" share sacrifice, oppression, and identity loss as common themes. In Beloved, Sethe is forced to make the ultimate sacrifice of killing…
Paper Doctorate
Literary analysis of "The Rocking Horse Winner" and "The Lottery
An Analysis of "Luck" in "The Lottery" and "The Rocking Horse Winner"