Genre
Autobiography, history
Setting and Context
Sarajevo, former Yugoslavia 1991-1993
Narrator and Point of View
Zlata Filipovic narrating from her point of view and the point of view of Sarajevo families
Tone and Mood
Fearful, uncertain, life-threatening
Protagonist and Antagonist
Zlata and her family are the protagonists, the war and the politicians waging it the antagonists
Major Conflict
War between Serbs, Croats and Muslims
Climax
Publication of Zlata's journal around the world
Foreshadowing
The destruction in Dubrovnik foreshadows the escalation of war in Sarajevo
Understatement
Zlata says repeatedly that she hates the war, that it is disgusting, which understates the devastation war has caused in her life
Allusions
Zlata alludes to the normalcy of her childhood before war by wanting to join the Madonna fan club
Imagery
Zlata paints pictures of the devastation around her that describe the way everything looks (ruined, burned out), sounds (constant shelling, gunfire, screaming) and smell (burning, rancid due to the toilets not flushing) which creates an overwhelming image of the totality of the carnage
Paradox
Zlata is a much loved only child protected by her family, but as the war progresses she has no choice but to remain strong because that is the only thing keeping her parents going
Parallelism
There is a parallel between Zlata and Anne Frank; in fact, Zlata gave her diary a name inspired by Anne Frank. Both children lived in cramped quarters in fear of the war around them
Metonymy and Synecdoche
Zlata tells us that Sarajevo was frightened, Sarajevo wanted to pack up and leave, using Sarajevo to mean all of the people left living there
Personification
Zlata says that autumn used his brush to paint nature in glorious colors giving a season the ability to hold a paintbrush and color the world around "him"