by Beth Alcazar (June 05, 2018)
Personification is an effective literary tool used as a method for describing something. It is a technique by which human characteristics, qualities or emotions are attributed to something that is not human — or even alive. Personification can add interest to a poem, presentation, advertisement or story. It’s fun to read. It can bring life and understanding to the subject at hand. For example, have you ever heard someone say, “Traffic slowed to a crawl,” or, “The stars winked in the night sky?” We know that cars are not literally crawling around the asphalt like infants. We also understand that big balls of gas in space are not human, and they do not have eyes, so they cannot wink. But we also comprehend what is meant by both statements: Traffic was really bad, and the starlight twinkled.
With
that, I would argue that most people know that an inanimate object does not
really have feelings, needs, desires or the ability to do human things. We get
it. So that is one reason it bothers me so much that people are allowing — and
falling for — the personification of firearms.
Consider the gun owner who destroyed his AR-15 in a viral video
after the atrocious incident at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in
Parkland, Florida. He stated, “I can’t live knowing that my gun’s out there,
and it can one day possibly commit a horrific act like the other day in
Florida.”
See the problem?
We know that guns do not kill people. While they can certainly
be used by human beings for malicious intentions, guns are not alive. They
cannot commit crimes. They do not have emotions. They do not get angry. They
cannot make decisions. Guns do not choose to wound or kill. They cannot move on
their own. They do not have the ability to get up and go.
Guns are things — inanimate objects — and yet, guns are
constantly blamed for injuries. Guns are blamed for deaths. Guns are blamed for
mass shootings. This blaming is an egregious error because personifying
firearms takes away attention from the person or people who actually committed
the crime. It takes away the responsibility of the criminals who use guns to
hurt or kill others. It takes away the accountability from the human beings at
fault. And instead of people seeing these bad guys and wanting to bring them to
justice, people are seeing the guns and wanting them either destroyed or taken
away. And sadly, that’s not the problem. And it’s certainly not the solution.
Personification is a poetic technique; it is not an excuse for
terrible people to do terrible things with guns.
Comments are invited!
Send feedback to: WatchDog
2 comments:
They do the same with other devices that they don’t like—
“The SUV ran over the man who was not in the crosswalk”
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