\input mla8 \numberfirstpage \name{Holden} \last{Rohrer} \prof{Jones} \clas{AP Lang} \header \title{Rhetorical Essay on {\it The Things They Carried}} % Rhetorical Analysis in 47 and a half minutes Tim O'Brien's {\it The Things They Carried} is only topically about the Vietnam War. Throughout the book, he often tells stories directly, but will afterwards analyze it through the lens of why he wrote that or will tell a story while at the same time delivering a series of philosophical messages and questions about his own storytelling, from his own and the reader's point of view, and about how this bleeds into other components of his life. O'Brien uses fanciful language to emphasize that ``unreal'' stories and dreams and ideas are philosophically equal to ``real'' experience. This excerpt follows that pattern to connect the material and the immaterial. O'Brien describes his dreamlike state as a ``spell of memory and imagination'' with what would be impossible qualities in the material world like ``no brain tumors and no funeral homes.'' This mist of thought is meant to make this place seem magical because O'Brien is trying to convince the reader that this imaginative trance and by equivocation stories in general are a sort of window past the horror that is war and the human condition. But O'Brien doesn't imply that all stories are tonally fanciful like his with Linda. Because not even all in this book are; his war stories about Lemon and Lavender are sense horrific and a type of pointless that O'Brien talks about in {\it How to Tell a True War Story}. He does imply that, at their core, every story has this wonderful ability. In the true story that's never happened, where a group of soldiers are on patrol, one jumps on a grenade, but they all die anyway, O'Brien's telling has a fanciful, ridiculous humor to it. O'Brien says that this story is true because it explains the emotions that he and his comrades experienced. The idea that the emotional core of a story matters most is a central theme here because it means that a story can exist with equal value regardless of its source. And O'Brien uses ridiculousness and impossibility to achieve this end: bringing someone back after death or calling a dead Vietnamese child a ``crispy peanut'' are ridiculous, but their binding to reality---to the war or to O'Brien's life require the reader to recognize that these stories are just as valid regardless of which parts of Kiley's tale of the Sweetheart on the Song Tra Bong really happened. %% 32:35. This last chapter provides the most examples of wondrous language because the story is itself wonderful. O'Brien describes his love with her as deep and adult-like and talks about the great swells of emotion he felt when he was around her. The experiences he has in his dreams, like the birthday party with a grandiose cake, and the ``thrill and mystery'' he feels about seeing her in his dreams, lead the reader to a conclusion that follows from the immaterial being philosophically real: wonder and fancy are very much parts of ``real'' life. The war stories where the men cope with the dead by playing it up as if the people were objects or as if they were still alive are extensions of this fancy. O'Brien uses fancy to compel the reader into believing that the immaterial and material are the same because its allure is so powerful. %%44:55 \bye