Saturday, October 12, 2019
The Use of Humour in The Opposite Sex. :: English Literature
Discuss the use of humour in The Opposite Sex.    The Opposite Sex is a small story, which although diminuitive in  length, fits its' purpose well as a humourous short read.    The use of language, the portrayal of certain images and the dexterous  use of imagery in literary terms such as similies are all well within  place in the story- all contributing to the laughable effect that it  has upon its' readers.    I believe that 'The Opposite Sex' is set and based on the times that  the writer Laurie Lee had when he was a young boy. This helps to link  the story into modern age circumstances, that although it has been a  few years since Lee was a young boy, as proven in my Julius Caesar  essay, human nature does not change. Therefore the reader finds it  easier to relate to.    The story is written very informally, rather like a 'chatty' style,  this helps to create a better link between the writing and the reader  themselves. This is shown in the very first line of 'The Opposite  Sex'. Only six words in, the word 'sex'is used. To many this would be  shocking, but also a small pointer in the direction of an exciting  read.    When Lee describes how his life was as open as a 'cucumber frame' and  that sex to him was a 'constant force like the national grid', we  begin to see his imaginative use of similies, which are used well by  Lee to create good humourous effect.    One of the funniest parts from the story follows, as Lee describes how  he felt about sex, using lots of tricky similies and using the  comparison between sex and a 'game of cricket'. 'After years of lazily  inspecting the pitch, came when I was suddenly called to play'. This  shows that Lee had been concious of sex for a long time, but his burst  for it had only just emerged as he was 'called to play'. He then  writes- 'There had of course, been early practice at the nets, some of  it solitary..". I found this particular extraction from the story very  humourous, as Lee is using such phallic symbols as these, which is  paving the way for the reader to imagine what he's actually getting  it, so therefore it would apply to everybody's sense of humour. Then  he writes, '..the occasion arrived when I actually stood at the  crease, bat in hand, ready to strip the willow'. I also found this  particular part very amusing, as mentioned before, I can imagine what  he's getting at here. It's a clever use of a set of phallic symbols  which serve to take place of any crude language and also help to add    					    
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