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“The Sniper” By Liam O’Flaherty
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“The Sniper” By Liam O’Flaherty. PRE-READING NOTES The Writer and his Historical Connection.

Dec 28, 2015

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Page 1: “The Sniper” By Liam O’Flaherty. PRE-READING NOTES The Writer and his Historical Connection.

“The Sniper”By Liam O’Flaherty

Page 2: “The Sniper” By Liam O’Flaherty. PRE-READING NOTES The Writer and his Historical Connection.

PRE-READING NOTESThe Writer and his Historical Connection

Page 3: “The Sniper” By Liam O’Flaherty. PRE-READING NOTES The Writer and his Historical Connection.

Meet the Writer• Liam O’Flaherty (1896-

1984)• Born to a large, poor family

on Inishmore, one of Ireland’s rocky Aran Islands.

• He took inspiration from the peasant life of the Aran Islands in his writing.

Page 4: “The Sniper” By Liam O’Flaherty. PRE-READING NOTES The Writer and his Historical Connection.

Background• This story is set in Dublin,

Ireland, in the 1920s, during a time of civil war.• Republicans: desired all of

Ireland to be totally free from British rule.

• Free Staters: desired compromise with Britain.

• The Irish Civil war tore families apart: child against parent, sister against sister, and brother against brother.

Page 5: “The Sniper” By Liam O’Flaherty. PRE-READING NOTES The Writer and his Historical Connection.

POST-READING NOTESLiterary Elements

Page 6: “The Sniper” By Liam O’Flaherty. PRE-READING NOTES The Writer and his Historical Connection.

Conflict and Point of View

• Conflict:• Man vs. Man: the struggle exists between the

Republican sniper and the Free Stater sniper.

• Point of View:• Third person limited: restricted to one character

(the Republican sniper) and observes only what he sees, hears, feels, or does.

Page 7: “The Sniper” By Liam O’Flaherty. PRE-READING NOTES The Writer and his Historical Connection.

Similes and Metaphors• Similes:• “Machine guns and rifles broke the silence of the night,

spasmodically, like dogs barking on lone farms.”

• Metaphors:• “Around the beleaguered Four Courts the heavy guns

roared.”• “The sniper could hear the dull panting of the motor .

. . His bullets would never pierce the steel that covered the gray monster.”

• Personification: attributing human characteristics to something nonhuman.

Page 8: “The Sniper” By Liam O’Flaherty. PRE-READING NOTES The Writer and his Historical Connection.

Mood• The mood of “The Sniper” is nervous and

suspenseful. • O’Flaherty keeps you reading to find out what

comes next. • The reader feels the suspense and becomes

nervous when the Republican sniper is shot and he has to make a plan so that he can both live and kill the Free Stater sniper on the opposite rooftop.

Page 9: “The Sniper” By Liam O’Flaherty. PRE-READING NOTES The Writer and his Historical Connection.

Irony• The irony of “The Sniper” is situational.• Situational irony: an event occurs that contradicts

the expectations of the reader.

• Neither the reader nor the Republican sniper expects the two snipers to be brothers fighting against each other.

Page 10: “The Sniper” By Liam O’Flaherty. PRE-READING NOTES The Writer and his Historical Connection.

Theme

• One of the possible themes of “The Sniper” is that war has no boundaries.