The Garden of Eden Literary Elements

The Garden of Eden Literary Elements

Genre

Fiction novel

Setting and Context

Third-person narrative

Narrator and Point of View

Third-person narrative

Tone and Mood

Adventurers, explorative, optimistic, enlightening

Protagonist and Antagonist

The central characters are David Bourne and Catherine Bourne.

Major Conflict

The main conflict is that David has intercourse with Marita, and his wife, Catherine approves the affair.

Climax

The climax comes when David reproduces the best short African Stories, which surpasses many people's expectations.

Foreshadowing

Catherine's sexual pretense foreshadows David's unfaithfulness.

Understatement

The cordial relationship between David and Marita is understated. Towards the end of the story, the reader realizes that Marita and David are very close, and their relationship can lead to intimacy and marriage.

Allusions

The story alludes to the passion for authorship and the love for literature.

Imagery

The images of sexuality and intercourse depict sight imagery to readers to see how David had sex with Marita. Ironically, Catherine is the one who brings Marita to David and requests them to have sexual intercourse.

Paradox

The main paradox is that David has sexual intercourse with Marita, and she swims naked alongside Catherine!

Parallelism

There is parallelism between David’s ambition for the African short stories and Catherine’s motivation for the novel.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

The feeling of unfaithfulness is a metonymy for guilt and self-reflection.

Personification

N/A

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