The excerpt from the novel Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides uses rhetorical strategies to   convey a lifeless t unity to represent the time when  workforce were  non  employ to  buy the farming in an   assembly line. The  produceplace is   wry; the cars are alive whereas the humans are dead. The   cars engine soar[s] away, and grow[s] eccentric, the camshaft flies around, and   body   parts form; the way the engine is described could be the description of a teenager. This is   contrasted with the robotic depiction of the workers. The process of how Wierzbiki,   Stephanides, and OMalley work in the  factory is repeated six times, making a mechanical   rhythm, like they are the metal and electricity   mannikin of of feelings and personality. When the   assembly line is first introduced, workers rebelled; they started with life in them.  aft(prenominal) they   had  indulgent their disagree custodyt with the new pace of the age, the  repetitious motions   became congenital.  any process th   ey perform takes a certain  sum up of time which never   changes because they perform the tasks unconsciously and monotonously; to   break on [the]   starter motor (twenty-six seconds), to screw in the  striving  click (seventeen seconds), to weld   the pieces together (one minute and ten seconds) as if the workers  suck in been mechanically   programmed.

 Not only does the  time add to the  alter feel, but so does the reference to   the  chemical group of workers as anyone or no one; even though OMalley is called by his name he is   more  attached with his specific  design on the assembly line. The workers themselves also cannot    move and    have relationships; they do not risk being  !   pink-slipped because in the factory it is common   knowledge that they can hire... and  bring up anyone. Not  at once do the three men working side by   side talk to one other. Wierzbiki reams, Stephanides grinds, and OMalley attaches. The   men  move the steel into the molds cant stop even to  break the burning bits of metal from   their arms. These men have...If you want to get a full essay, order it on our website: 
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