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Soccer Simile

Robinho scores "as unfussily as a man peeling a ripe banana."

In most of my classes on literature, I teach my students to recognize, analyze, and even make use of figures of speech, literary devices that involve unusual uses of language in order to create deeper meanings. Figures of speech are typically divided into two categories: tropes (sometimes called “figures of thought”) and rhetorical figures. Roughly speaking, a trope is a figure of speech that alters the meanings of the words it employs, while a rhetorical figure makes use of standard meanings but uses words in a way that creates unexpected effects.

Tropes often involve a comparison between two unlike things. The two tropes that most students learn first are simile and metaphor. To refresh your memory: a simile is a comparison two unlike things (referred to as a “tenor” and a “vehicle”) using the words “like” or “as.” In a metaphor, the association between tenor and vehicle is made without the words “like” or “as.” A metaphor, therefore is a trope of substitution in which the tenor is represented or figured by the vehicle. So, for example, in the sentence “Kaká is a gazelle,” “Kaká” is the tenor, and “gazelle” is the “vehicle.”

We can change the sentence to make use of a simile: “Kaká runs like a gazelle.” The tenor and vehicle are the same, but there is something different about the association between them. In the metaphor, the two things are superimposed on one another; in the simile, the two things are kept apart conceptually.

Sometimes a metaphor is only “implied”: “Robinho sliced through the Dutch defense.” In this case we have only the vehicle, the slicing; the tenor (the act of running) is implied.

I’m starting a new series of posts that point out figures of speech in everyday uses. Today’s figure of speech is a simile that would have made the mystery novelist Raymond Chandler, who was famous for his very elaborate similes, proud. It comes from the Guardian‘s account of the Dutch soccer team’s victory over Brazil in this morning’s World-Cup quarter-final:

The change may have had some influence on the opening goal, which came in the 10th minute when Melo, from inside his own half, measured a straight ball that invited Robinho to run behind the two centre-backs and stroke the ball past Maarten Stekelenburg from 15 yards as unfussily as a man peeling a ripe banana. (Emphasis added.)

I’m not sure I understand what it means exactly, but it sure is picturesque.

If you find a trope you like, send it to me and I’ll post it.

[Photo credit: Jamie McDonald/Getty Images via the New York Times]

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Hamartia at the World Cup

For the second World Cup in a row, Ghana eliminates the USA 2-1. At least this time there was nothing to dispute about Ghana’s second goal.

Hamartia is one of the most famous concepts from Aristotle’s Poetics, and it’s translated as “the tragic flaw” that both accounts for a hero’s greatness and also brings about his downfall. But some scholars suggest that it simply means “error,” a mistake that the hero makes from which he cannot recover.

The USA displayed hamartia in both senses of the term.

The abiding flaw: a tendency toward early defensive lapses that saw them constantly conceding early goals and needing to come from behind. A second flaw: the lack of a lethal striker up front to help them make up for the early defensive lapses.

Today’s errors: Bradley’s tinkering with his line-up; a giveaway near the start at midfield, with the central defense to slow to recognize the threat and goalie Tim Howard cheating toward the center and beaten on the near post; and the defense getting split and out-muscled on the winning goal.

The USA were valiant, battling until the very end. And I hope that interest in soccer that the team’s run in the competition has generated here in the US will continue and grow.

You didn’t have to consult the Delphic oracle before the Cup began to foresee that the USA would be eliminated before the end. So I transfer my allegiance now to my backup team: the Netherlands. Go Robin van Persie!

[Photo: Asamoah Gyan scoring the winning goal. GETTY IMAGES via the Telegraph.]

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