10 Examples from Etopeia
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
Etopeia
The etopeia is a rhetorical figure consisting of the description of the moral and psychological traits of a person. For example: He always sat in the back of the class. He was quiet, shy, but much more intelligent than the rest, although he took care to go unnoticed. The few times he participated in class, in his weak voice that he struggled to lift up, he said things that left us all speechless. You could tell that he was cultured, thoughtful and memorable, as well as creative.
With the passage of time, other traits were added that allow the understanding of the character such as his personality, customs, beliefs, feelings, attitudes and worldview.
Ethopeia differs from prosopography (the description of the physical appearance of the characters) and portrait (literary device that combines external and internal features in the description of the characters).
Normally, the ethopeia happens when a character is given a voice to express himself through his specific terms, speech mode, and imagery. In this sense, it is about letting the character speak for himself, using the
dialogue, monologue or inner monologue.The etopeia is considered a theatrical resource, since it forces the reader to enter the psyche of the character and represents a psychic degree of the description.
Examples from Ethiopia
- His routines were so rigorous that neighbors took advantage of them to adjust their watches. This was Kant, a philosopher who, perhaps because of his sickly complexion, clung to punctuality and predictability until his death. Every day, he got up at five in the morning, from eight to ten or from seven to nine, depending on the day, he gave his private lessons. He was a lover of after-meals, which could be extended for up to three hours and, later, always at the same hour, he was taking a walk through his town that he never left - and then devoting himself to reading and meditation. At 10, religiously, he went to bed to sleep.
- His only god was money. He was always attentive to how to sell, even the unsaleable, to some naive who came across at the station, whom with words and demonstrations he managed to enchant even with a button. For him, everything was worth when it came to selling. The truth was never the north of him. Hence, he was nicknamed the sophist.
- In his smile you could see his sad past. Still, he was determined to leave it there, in the past. She is always ready to give everything for others. Even what he didn't have. So he lived his life, striving that the pain that he had gone through did not translate into revenge, resentment or resentment.
- Those who did know my father highlight his passion for work, family and friends. Duty and responsibility never limited his sense of humor; He also had no itch to show his affection in front of others. Religion, in him, was always an obligation, never a conviction.
- Work was never his thing. The routine, either. He slept until any hour and bathed by chance. Even so, everyone in the neighborhood loved him, he always helped us to change the little skin on the taps or the burned out light bulbs. Also, when he saw us arrive laden with things, he was the first to offer to help. We are going to miss it.
- He was an artist, even in the way he looked at him. Attentive to details, he found a work in every corner. Each sound, for him, could be a song, and each sentence, the fragment of some poem that no one wrote. His effort and dedication can be seen in each of the songs he left behind.
- My neighbor Manuelito is a special being. Every morning at six o'clock, he takes that grotesque dog for a walk. She plays drums, or so she claims to do. So, from 9 until you know what time, the building rumbles because of his hobby. At night, he stinks the whole building with the preparation of unfamiliar recipes his grandmother once taught him. Despite the noise, the smells and the barking of his puppy, Manuelito makes himself loved. He is always ready to help others.
- Apparently his wife had left him. And since then her life had fallen apart. Every night, she would be seen in the neighborhood patio with a bottle of the cheapest wine and an unwashed glass. Her gaze always lost.
- He never touched a microwave. Slow fire and patience were, for her, my grandmother, the key to any recipe. She was always waiting for us at the door, with our favorite dishes already arranged on the table, and she watched us attentively as we enjoyed each bite, with an uninterrupted smile. Every Saturday at 7, we were to accompany her to mass. It was the only time of day when she was serious and quiet. The rest of the day he talked non-stop and every time he laughed everything around him shook. Plants were another of her passions. She cared for each one of them as if they were her children: she watered them, sang to them and spoke to them as if they could hear her.
- His words were never his thing, he always remained silent: since he arrived at the office, with his I was always impeccable, until the clock struck six, at which time he left without making a sound any. When his forehead was glistening with sweat, it was because of his concern that some number would not close him. His pencils, with which he did endless calculations, were always bitten. Now that he's retired, we blame ourselves for not having heard more about him.
- The living of him resembles, in his tireless walk, an evangelist of civility, whose immense fall of proselytes he saw for six decades feeding crowds, releasing galley slaves, envisioning distant places, fascinating harvests of passion, smelling the strange as their own store with the precious sandalwood of goodness and ingenuity. (Guillermo Leon Valencia)
- Horrible red flowers bloom beneath her peaceful faces. They are the flowers cultivated by my hand, the hand of a mother. I have given life, now I also take it away, and no magic can restore the spirit of these innocents. They will never put their tiny arms around my neck again, never will her laughter bring the music of the spheres to my ears. That revenge is sweet is a lie. (Medea, according to Sophocles)
- But alas! I suffer a fate similar to that of my father. I am the daughter of Tantalus, who lived with the divinities, but, after the banquet, he was expelled of the company of the gods, and since I come from Tantalus, I confirm my lineage with the misfortunes. (Níobe, according to Euripides)
- Daughter of the most illustrious citizen, Metellus Scipio, wife of Pompey, prince of enormous power, mother of the most precious of children, I find myself shaken in all directions for such a cluster of calamities that I can assume them in my head or in the silence of my thoughts, I do not have words or phrases with which express them. (Cornelia, according to Plutarco)
- Don Gumersindo […] was affable […] helpful. Compassionate […] and he went out of his way to please and be useful to everyone, even if it cost him work, sleeplessness, fatigue, as long as it didn't cost him a real […] Happy and a friend of jokes and mockery […] and he rejoiced them with the pleasantness of his treatment […] and with his discreet, although not very attic conversation (In Pepita Jimenez by Juan Valera)
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