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How Does Ishmael Beah Use Imagery In A Long Way Gone

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In the book, A long way gone: Memoirs of a Child Soldier, the author recounts vividly a period in his life where he experienced the civil unrest in Sierra Leone in the 1990’s. Ishmael Beah utilizes powerful imagery to allow the reader to visualize how violent the civil war was. One of the quotes that stood out, was “IT WAS INFURIATING to be told what to do by civilians. Their voices … enraged me so much that I would punch the wall, my locker or anything that I was standing next to. A few days earlier, we could have decided whether they would live or die.” (Beah 138). This quote shows a sharp contrast, with the lifestyle Ishmael Beah had, with the one that is imposed onto him, while also highlighting the transition underwent from being a child, to being a soldier. …show more content…

Although he mentions he was “… a troublesome boy as well and always got into fights in school and at the river.”(42), I believe at that moment in time, the author had the inability to fight in a battle, much less shoot at an enemy. When the rebels attack his village, he runs away. It’s evident that in a life threatening situation he prefers to evade an aggressor. Only when he is essentially enlisted in the army, does he adopt a soldier’s mentality. I consider the way the army conditioned the author, by usage of drugs and civic duty the leading factors why he partook in the brutality of the war. The battles he remembers, the way he attacked rebels, is told in a polarizing manner; it is noted that some of the rebels are in fact forced in enlistment. Ishmael Beah takes on a distinct lifestyle that forces him to act as an adult would. The way he dehumanizes and acts superior to others, can also be seen during

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