LANGUAGE USED TO DEFY AUTHORITY DURING MORDEN FICTION WRITING
Abstract
The academic publishing of a research work is contingent upon the calibre of its language. Within the academic sphere, books, editorials, and journals have unique reference and citation formats as well as language, sentence structure, vocabulary, and writing or reporting modes. There are several obstacles in adhering to writing language or grammar as authors are required to convey their well-organized ideas and research results with precision and tact. For non-native speakers writing in an additional language, an impediment of the mother tongue or structural structure might sometimes be encountered by the writers. Literary language is a vital tool used by authors to convey their ideas and opinions as well as to reflect social realities. Through literary language, the writer's inner world as well as the true representation of social life needs to be communicated and summarised. The language of writing is not static in the course of social evolution; changes in it will also affect the structure of contemporary writing, and the two of them will reinforce and mutually influence one another. The article has shown how women's traits changed after the conclusion of World War I. During this period, women were encouraged to go beyond of their comfort zones and embrace the stereotypes that the male-dominated society had ingrained in them. Ultimately, the paper will contend that Ferrell used the political climate of the 1970s to inform his criticism of colonial medical treatments, which seemed to be founded on reason and science. Farrell then utilised this critique to challenge the larger moral stance of Empire in his fiction.