Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Personification in Oscar Wilde's "The Selfish Giant"

View through CrossRef
The research has displayed the role of the literary figure of speech, personification used in the story of Oscar Wilde's "The Selfish Giant". It has linked the four types of the personifications and how the British women have been applied as the personifications to extend the colonial government as the civilized and the superior race in the globe. As the British women have been found to be powerful to the British colonial government, so is the strength of the use personifications in the work of art and in the literary creativity. The personified objects and the seasons in the story have elevated its classic form to the fairy-tale as the story of the children and it has lured the attention of the readers. Reading such personified tales enhances the creativity of the children and of any readers but it is to be identified as the language of personifications by the readers while reading it. The beauty and the strength of the fairy-tale would be lost in absence of the personified objects and the seasons in the story "The Selfish Giant". Overall, personification in “The Selfish Giant” makes the story’s moral lessons more accessible and memorable for children by giving human traits to non-human elements and depicting their interactions in a way that resonates with the readers' own experiences and emotions. While younger children might understand personification more through the narrative and illustrations, older children might analyze it more critically and recognize it as a literary device used to enhance the story’s themes and moral lessons. It has been found that the teachers have to apply some of the techniques in the context for the students in making them comprehending the use of the personification in the story and by displaying the effectiveness of the use of the figure of speech in creating the curiosity for the learners.
Nepal Journals Online (JOL)
Title: Personification in Oscar Wilde's "The Selfish Giant"
Description:
The research has displayed the role of the literary figure of speech, personification used in the story of Oscar Wilde's "The Selfish Giant".
It has linked the four types of the personifications and how the British women have been applied as the personifications to extend the colonial government as the civilized and the superior race in the globe.
As the British women have been found to be powerful to the British colonial government, so is the strength of the use personifications in the work of art and in the literary creativity.
The personified objects and the seasons in the story have elevated its classic form to the fairy-tale as the story of the children and it has lured the attention of the readers.
Reading such personified tales enhances the creativity of the children and of any readers but it is to be identified as the language of personifications by the readers while reading it.
The beauty and the strength of the fairy-tale would be lost in absence of the personified objects and the seasons in the story "The Selfish Giant".
Overall, personification in “The Selfish Giant” makes the story’s moral lessons more accessible and memorable for children by giving human traits to non-human elements and depicting their interactions in a way that resonates with the readers' own experiences and emotions.
While younger children might understand personification more through the narrative and illustrations, older children might analyze it more critically and recognize it as a literary device used to enhance the story’s themes and moral lessons.
It has been found that the teachers have to apply some of the techniques in the context for the students in making them comprehending the use of the personification in the story and by displaying the effectiveness of the use of the figure of speech in creating the curiosity for the learners.

Related Results

Personification in Oscar Wilde's "The Selfish Giant"
Personification in Oscar Wilde's "The Selfish Giant"
The research has displayed the role of the literary figure of speech, personification used in the story of Oscar Wilde's "The Selfish Giant". It has linked the four types of the pe...
Wilde and France
Wilde and France
Abstract A glance at the Index of Authors in Thomas Wright’s Oscar’s Books: A Journey around the Library of Oscar Wilde (2008) shows the extent to which Wilde rea...
Wilde Crimes: The Art of Murder and Decadent (Homo)Sexuality in Gyles Brandreth's Oscar Wilde Series
Wilde Crimes: The Art of Murder and Decadent (Homo)Sexuality in Gyles Brandreth's Oscar Wilde Series
Gyles Brandreth's Oscar Wilde novels (2007–12) appropriate Wilde for a neo-Victorian crime series in which the sharp-witted aestheticist serves as a detective à la Sherlock Holmes....
Wilde Rewound: Time-Travelling with Oscar in Recent Author Fictions
Wilde Rewound: Time-Travelling with Oscar in Recent Author Fictions
In the early 1980s historical figures in general – and writers from the past in particular – entered a kind of Golden Age thanks to fiction. Through various for...
De Profundis e Oscar Wilde: a pessoa, o escritor e o inscritor na autoria e o texto como gestão do contexto.
De Profundis e Oscar Wilde: a pessoa, o escritor e o inscritor na autoria e o texto como gestão do contexto.
Resumo: A concepção de autoria assumida fundamenta-se na proposta de Dominique Maingueneau (2006) porque ela permite mostrar a autoria como um funcionamento entrelaçado de instânci...
Introduction
Introduction
Abstract This Introduction sets the scene for the volume’s chapters by telling the story of Wilde’s critical history, from the early years in which Robert Ross co...
Oscar Wilde’s Remarkable Career: Professional Ambitions, Sexual Adventures
Oscar Wilde’s Remarkable Career: Professional Ambitions, Sexual Adventures
This chapter pays close attention to Oscar Wilde's evolving sexual interest in other men during a period when he established himself as a talented literary author with an attractiv...

Back to Top