I believe you meant the quotation that shows Jacques in a positive light is and your answer should most likely be "he was supposed to be sensual and a fast liver. It was therefore by the mere grace of the form that he was at first captured"
good luck in your future studies, dont forget to ask the question correctly so you can get a good answer!!
-a
Answer:
Explanation:
Scott Russell Sanders writes in a variety of genres: science fiction, realistic fiction, folktales, children’s stories, essays, and historical novels. Sanders contributes to both literally and popular magazines. He is a professor of English .
The main idea of Scott Russell Sanders' essay discusses his perception of the conflict of gender equality. This perception came into his mind after witnessing the harsh lives of his surrounding group of people.
He explains in this essay that men in his time had little choice in their future. He also says that men will only survive if they were a factory worker or a soldier. And he always believed he would become one of these two. Also, believe that women had an easier life as they won’t be working in a factory or risking their lives for others like a soldier.
And then he realized that women also go through stuff he was shocked because he always believes women had an easier, and enjoyable life.
The main purpose of this essay is to recognize that men and women go through hard situations equally but somehow there is a point that men think they go through a lot more
Well for one, characterisation is how a writer chooses to reveal a characters personality in a story, through things like physical appearance (shiny hair, blue eyes, nice smile, ect.) and through virtues and faults (brave, attentive, smart - egotistical, bitter, evil.)
Figurative language is basically how you'd describe said chracterisations, through things like personification, hyperbole, metaphors, similes, ect.
So with that being said, figurative language can help characterise a monster by doing more than just saying it's a monster; figurative language can make it /feel/ like a monster to the reader. Figurative language can turn the monster '3-D' (for lack of better words), by saying it has long claws, stinky breath, vicious fangs, a horrifying growl, ect.
My favourite example of figurative language is actually in the childrens book "Where the Wild Things Are" by Maurice Sendak, because it uses simple figurative language. Maurice Sendak describes the wild things as so: "They roared their terrible roars and gnashed their terrible teeth and rolled their terrible eyes and showed their terrible claws.'
Anyway, I hope this helped !! :-)