Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Compare the ways in which the authors of The Red Room, The Black Essay
Compare the ways in which the authors of The Red Room, The Black   Cottage and The Signalman create fear, suspense and tension.     GCSE PROSE STUDY COURSEWORK: Compare the ways in which the authors of  "The Red Room", "The Black Cottage" and "The Signalman" create fear,  suspense and tension.    In this essay i will be analysing the way three accomplished authors  create an atmosphere of tension, fear and suspense in their three  short stories. Once i had read their stories i instantly noticed how  comparable the stories were. They write about fear and suspense in  ways only you can comprehend if you have experienced it yourself. The  stories seem to be filled with the authors' own experience of fear,  suspense and tension, they incorporate this into their story and give  the reader the exact feeling of what they personally felt themselves.  They make sure that the reader knows how the characters feel and makes  the reader become fond of the characters.    The reader can really empathize with the writers, because they write  in a first person narrative. The stories contain vivid description  seen through the eyes of the narrators. The stories were written in  victorian times and have a certain gothic style to them. The  victorians believed it was immoral to isolate yourself from hummanity  and cut yourself off from compassion - there is evidence of this in  all three stories.    In "The Signalman"(Charles Dickens) the signalman isolates himself  from the rest of the world, therefore making the reader feel alone and  this plays tricks on his own mind:    " "Did it ring your bell yestersay evening when i was here, and you  went to the door?"    " Twice."    " Why see," said i, " how your imagination misleads you. My eyes were  on t...              ...that the maid could well be alot  smarter than the attackers and could escape from the terrorfying  situation she is in.    "The Signalman", Alot of climax and suspense becomes apparant in this  story because the character tries to find out whether the supernatural  that haunts him is real:    ""Will you come to the door with me and look for it now?" He bit his  under lip as though he were somewhat unwilling, but arose." Dickens  shows here, that the once arrogant and self admired narrator is  frightened of what might be on the other side of the red room's door.  This then creates an understanding for the reader that even the most  arrogant person will be afraid, once in the presence of the red room.    With these examples you can see how the writer creates fear, suspense  and tension, and why these stories are so brilliantly appraised as  excellent pieces of writing.                      
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