Integrity Literary Elements

Integrity Literary Elements

Genre

Memoir

Setting and Context

Set in 2007 in the United States of America

Narrator and Point of View

First-person point of view

Tone and Mood

Enlightening and optimistic

Protagonist and Antagonist

The protagonist is Egil "Bud" Krogh, and the antagonists are the perpetrators of the Watergate scandal.

Major Conflict

The major conflict occurs when Krogh is indicted in the Watergate scandal.

Climax

The climax comes when Krogh reflects on his life in prison and learns important lessons about integrity in leadership.

Foreshadowing

Krogh’s involvement in the Watergate scandal foreshadows his imprisonment.

Understatement

n/a

Allusions

The memoir alludes to Singogo and Grynberg’s "Anatomy of grand fraud: Goldenberg Scandal and the World Bank, " Africa's biggest corruption scandal in the 1990s. Many powerful politicians and business people were indicted in the scandal.

Imagery

The description of the oval office depicts the sense of sight to readers. The author says, "A large eagle was woven into the center of the blue rug, and another was emblazoned in the plaster of the ceiling." The imagery paints a picture of Krogh's authority while in his office.

Paradox

The central paradox in the memoir is that Egil Krogh, who was convicted in the Watergate scandal, educates people about ethical conduct in a public office where he failed.

Parallelism

n/a

Metonymy and Synecdoche

The White House is a metonymy for the executive branch of government in the United States of America.

Personification

The Watergate scandal is personified when the author says it was a monster that ate his people.

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