<Ul> <Li> Anti-Capitalism </Li> <Li> Theatre of the Oppressed </Li> <Li> Dehumanization </Li> <Li> The importance of spoken language <P> The contrast between human speech and the barking required of the man in his job as a watchdog could hardly be more stark, and at the end of the story he has entirely lost the ability to speak . The devaluation of language itself is not overly produced in Dragún's work, for the linguistic patterns remain largely coherent . Nevertheless, the use of language as a mechanism of both deceit and understanding is in keeping with the basic suspiciousness toward language's surface appearance that characterizes the absurd . </P> </Li> </Ul> <Li> Theatre of the Oppressed </Li> <Li> The importance of spoken language <P> The contrast between human speech and the barking required of the man in his job as a watchdog could hardly be more stark, and at the end of the story he has entirely lost the ability to speak . The devaluation of language itself is not overly produced in Dragún's work, for the linguistic patterns remain largely coherent . Nevertheless, the use of language as a mechanism of both deceit and understanding is in keeping with the basic suspiciousness toward language's surface appearance that characterizes the absurd . </P> </Li> <P> The contrast between human speech and the barking required of the man in his job as a watchdog could hardly be more stark, and at the end of the story he has entirely lost the ability to speak . The devaluation of language itself is not overly produced in Dragún's work, for the linguistic patterns remain largely coherent . Nevertheless, the use of language as a mechanism of both deceit and understanding is in keeping with the basic suspiciousness toward language's surface appearance that characterizes the absurd . </P>

The man who turned into a dog english