Hey guys,
Can someone please give me some quick feedback on this paragraph; it's the only one I'm not quite sure about.
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Similarly, Lessing highlights the way in which the power of language moulds our understanding to connect to the humanity of others. Through kairos, Lessing uses the Nobel Prize ceremony as an opportunity for drawing attention to the global inequalities in educational opportunities. She sets a desolate reality against an optimistic vision of the world where the impoverished have access to education that empowers them, and the fortunate realise the influence of education to foster change. The asyndeton, “who have had years of education, to know nothing of the world, to have read nothing…” allows Lessing to confront the audience with the dichotomy that although westerners have access to education, they take it for granted, whilst those living in poverty “thirst” for an education. In doing so, Lessing accentuates her purpose in advocating for global access to education, a memorable concept that reverberates today as global inequality is ever present. The pathos of this image is strengthened through the anaphora of “no” in conjunction with cumulative listing in “no atlas...no textbooks”, reinforcing the essentiality of education and books for all. Thus, Lessing is effective in revealing prominent ideas on the role literature and imagination play in inspiring a future founded upon freedom and opportunity that permeate today.
Thankyou so much!!