Rhetorical Elements - "On Dumpster Diving"
The underlying purpose in the piece
“On Dumpster Diving” is conveyed through Lars Eighner’s tone and ironic
elements throughout to convey his lifestyle as a homeless man, and how it is
necessary for him to rely on the privileged for basic necessities such as food.
His clearly didactic tone
emphasizes that he is not, in fact, embarrassed of the lifestyle he lives. Instead,
he embraces it, all the while, critiquing the privileged and their snobbish and
lazy outlooks on life. A recurring motif throughout the piece is “canned goods.”
Throughout the beginning of the piece, he discusses canned goods to a great
extent, illustrating how to assess if particular canned goods are ok to
consume. However, later in the piece he discusses canned good in the context of
college students. He reveals that his experience at a dumpster near the campus
was truly eye-opening; the fact that students were throwing out canned goods
demonstrates the irony of how these privileged students are wasting perfectly
good food which is benefiting the not-so-privileged homeless people. He
ultimately concludes that although many people view him with derogatory
adjectives such as a dirty, valueless, and poor, they themselves are not aware
of how wasteful and poor (in a substandard way) they actually are. His purpose
is clearly established at the end when he states that he is “sorry for them”
(Eighner 95). By doing this, he directly criticizes the rich, conveying that
they may be rich with wealth, but not rich in knowledge and self-worth.
Wow! Really nice analysis, I never thought there was so much insight into canned goods. Nice post!
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