The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County
This story is a frame story. Is the rhetorical situation the same for both parts of the frame? Explain your answer
Dialect and Rhetoric
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hunter r #199267
Last updated by
david p #206425
Dialect and Rhetoric
Not really. The difference between the educated easterner and the down-and-out miner in California indicate distinctly different "rhetorical situations," and certainly the rhetoric used by both characters is very different. The easterner's diction is elevated--"In compliance with the request," "garrulous," " I hereunto append," "a myth," "such a personage," "conjectured," "infamous," "exasperating reminiscence," "dilapidated," "tranquil countenance," "cherished companion." Obviously, Simon Wheeler is the opposite. The easterner's situation is simply non-fictional realism, while Wheeler's story and frame seem to border on the fictional and fantastic (perhaps "mythic").