The Power of the Past: Understanding Cross-Class Marriages Literary Elements

The Power of the Past: Understanding Cross-Class Marriages Literary Elements

Genre

Sociological and psychological book

Setting and Context

The book is written in the context of marriage across social classes.

Narrator and Point of View

Third-person narrative

Tone and Mood

Instructive and insightful

Protagonist and Antagonist

The central characters are Madison and Evan.

Major Conflict

There is a conflict between the class backgrounds of the blue-collar and the white-collar spouses.

Climax

The climax comes when the author concludes that the differences in class backgrounds in marriage are a vital factor that pulls couples together to combine varying experiences to achieve a common economic goal.

Foreshadowing

The conception of the blue-collar background foreshadows the laissez-faire approach to working.

Understatement

The impact of the white-collar background in career growth and development is understated.

Allusions

The story alludes to the class-based deviation between husbands and wives and its inevitability in marriage.

Imagery

The imagery of the most common complaint depicting Kevin as a lazy husband who does not want to help his wife in the house depicts sight imagery. For instance, the wife says, “When we first bought the house, I was doing all of the cleanings, and Kevin was watching a lot of football. And I was like, this is a bunch of B.S.' Kevin would not do more household work and instead recommended that they hire a woman to clean their home.”

Paradox

The main paradox is that the difference in class backgrounds brings couples closer to achieving a similar economic objective.

Parallelism

There is parallelism between the economic concepts between the couples coming from white-collar and blue-collar backgrounds.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

A mythic belief is used as metonymy for conventional attitude.

Personification

N/A

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