Appropriate Humor in Nickel and Dimed by Barbara Ehrenreich

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Barbara Ehrenreich employed the use of humor multiple times in Nickel and Dimed; it was perhaps her most frequently used rhetorical device. Ehrenreich was trying to portray the tragedy and heartbreak of the situation by using that sort of hopeless, sardonic humor. She also used her humor as a way to camouflage topics that would otherwise be off-limits. Although some of the humor included in the narrative may have seemed distasteful, it all had a purpose and was rarely used inappropriately.
The majority of her witty remarks were used in a sardonic way. This was to present the hopelessness of her situation. On page 109, Ehrenreich speaks of how unskilled her job really is. "But why complain about not being paid when those people at the Buddhist monastery pay with their own money to do the same kind of work?". Ehrenreich continues to sarcastically illustrate the hopelessness of her position on page 151 when she describes the hotels in which she is forced to stay in. "To say that some place is the worst motel in the country is, of course, to set oneself up for considerable challenge. I have encountered plenty of contenders in my own travels--the one in Cleveland that turned into a brothel at night, the one in Butte where the window looked out into another room. Still, the Clear view Inn leaves the competition in the dust." Her condescending and ridiculing tone leaves no doubt that she is using sarcasm to help paint a clearer picture. Humor turned out to be a very successful way in illustrating just how poor her living conditions were throughout her journey. Finally, on page 160, Ehrenreich continues on her sarcastic path. "Tonight, I had the ne sensation, Survivor, on CBS, where "real people" are struggling to light a ...

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...to make the reading experience more enjoyable and entertaining. Barbara Ehrenreich implemented humor to add cohesiveness and make connections for the reader. Instead of making a brilliant point and it being completely missed by the reader, she included humor to tie up the loose ends for her audience. Finally, Ehrenreich added humor to remind her audience that she still had a lot of depth as a person. She knew that her brilliance may have been lost while her audience experience her working low wage jobs, so she added tactful humor to flaunt her writing style. This levity for the hopelessness of the situation never went too far. Because all of her wit had a place and a purpose, it can all be categorized as completely appropriate humor.

Works Cited
Ehrenreich, Barbara. Nickel and dimed: on (not) getting by in America. New York: Metropolitan Books, 2001. Print.

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