In Looking For Alaska, by John Green, there is a lot of symbolism and meaningful objects presented throughout the book. In my collage, I chose to include some of the book’s most important objects and pictures to help give a deeper understanding of the book.…
After Emily died in Grover’s corners, Simon says “that’s the happy existence you want to go back to, Ignorance and blindness” (109). Her worst days were actually not bad, she just focused on petty things. After attaining this knowledge that her life was a cloud, she freaks out. Coming out of a narrow point of view is overwhelming and stressful. After Emily realizes this she discusses with another ghost, “where you happy?” “No... I should’ve listened to you, that’s all human beings are! Just blind people” (109). Emily wants to try to bring her friends and loved one out of the cave of ignorance, but she can’t. She escaped, while her friends were left behind. In Pleasantville narrow points of view are also demonstrated. “What’s outside of Pleasantville? Like, what’s at the end of main street?” “Mary Sue, you should know the answer to that, the end of Main street is just the beginning again.” No one knows what’s outside become they were forced to not think of that, even the teachers do not know what is outside. Everyone is too shallow to realize their is an outside world until Mary Sue tells them. “There are some places that the road doesn’t go in a circle. There are some places where the road keeps going.” They were happy, until they earned that there was much more to be discovered, then they became greedy for knowledge. They did…
“Because I will forget her, yes. That which came together will fall apart imperceptibly slowly, and I will forget, but she will forgive my forgetting, just as I forgive her for forgetting me and the Colonel and everyone but herself and her mom in those last moments she spent as a person. I know now that she forgives me for being dumb and scared and doing the dumb and scared thing. I know she forgives me, just as her mother forgives her.” At the end of the novel, after Alaska has died, and Miles sits down and writes his way out of the labyrinth, he faces reality and accepts everything that’s going on. In addition to facing reality, he forgives everyone and learns to let go. He discovers that forgiving is the only way to survive in the labyrinth because there were so many people who would have to live with things done and things left undone the day Alaska died. Acknowledging that the only way out of the labyrinth is to forgive, and then facing reality and letting things go, is the last and most definitive sign that Miles has come of age.…
The story takes place during the American Civil War during the battle of Owl creek,Tennessee. The night before the battle the protagonist Joby (a 14 year old who is the drummer boy for one of the sides it was not specified in the story ). After an old peach seed from the previous year falls and hits his drum Joby then realizes that he might die and his family will never see him again then he starts to cry . the general comes up and after a speech that reassures Joby and that’s where the story ends. The theme is to face your fears and it’s okey to be afraid . the symbolism is unique and if the reader has time check it out and see for themselves.…
The authors of each piece are discussing the same topic but are using different points of view. How does each person's point of view shape the reader’s understanding of the miners' lives? Use details from each source to support your answer.…
Adventures in the Unknown Interior of America is a tale of epic proportions worthy of The Odyssey. The only difference being that this tale is true. Written by Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca, Adventures in the Unknown Interior of America details the events of Cabeza de Vaca’s eight-year trip from Spain to the New World. It becomes quite clear though his journey that Cabeza de Vaca changes into a completely different man than he was when he set out from Spain in the name of the king, and God.…
Focusing on Tom after the accident, his mind was dark. Despair grew around him; sucking him into a place he wasn’t sure if he wanted to go. The cave, ‘a dark brown place’ is his room, the room his uncle called his own when he was a boy. The cave signifies the inside of Tom, but not throughout the whole book. Tom moves through life day by day, moment by moment, in a struggle to get back to the happy place he was before the accident. The darkness Jane Burke focusses on at the start of the book shows how much dark is compared to light, from the start of the book to the final page.…
A common theme in both Into the Wild and Everything is Illuminated is an archetype of this Eden a final destination of journey. For “Alex,” it was his Alaska, for Alex, Jonathan, and Alex’s Grandfather it was Trachimbrod. An Eden in literature is a final destination or state that a character, or set of characters in the case of Everything is Illuminated, strives to achieve or find. Both books have the characters searching for their Eden’s for their own personal reasons. “Alex” takes on his journey to get to his Eden for himself and his constant goal is to make it to his Alaska, his final adventure. Despite all the people he has met and all the amazing things he had done and all the memories he made in his mind he was only set on his Alaska. Ironically, for “Alex” his final Eden was also his final resting place and he was not able to get passed his Alaska. For the group in Everything is Illuminated, they are searching for Trachimbrod as their Eden for their Journey. The idea of an Eden is a very common archetype in literature throughout decades and decades of writing. An Eden can also be a person or a state of being that the main characters are searching for but in both these works the archetype forms as a physical location that the characters are searching for.…
Raven was an incredible animal to the Native North American Inuit culture; he was extremely symbolic in many ways. One of the most important things Raven could do was transform; he was the barrier of magic to many, being able to transform could bring happiness to everyone. The Inuit culture believed that Raven could heal many due to his magic and great level of intelligence. Raven is the keeper of secrets, and can assist the Inuit people in finding their own hidden thoughts. Raven is also amazing for being able to keep track of ancestral memories and with his intelligence be able to tell the stories back to younger generations. The Inuit people recognize that everything in the universe holds a deeper meaning, as a result, all objects and beings deserve one's attention and respect. As Samuel Wilson mentioned in Trickster Treats “Trickster tales often serve to entertain and instruct children, teaching them how to behave and how the world works” (pg.1). When a child learns how the world works, it will expand their knowledge. In fact, the Inuit culture looked at raven as being a culture hero more then they looked at him being a “selfish buffoon”.…
"Labyrinthine. The very sound of that word sums it up-as slippery as thought, as perplexing as the truth, as long and convoluted as a life" (Cooper 347). That was how Bernard Cooper ended his insightful and thought-provoking essay "Labyrinthine." Those words haunt me to this very day. Cooper had perfectly described life through the pronunciation of one lone word, "labyrinthine" (630). It was through a trivial infatuation, one that started when he was seven, that Cooper was able to make such a powerful observation. He loved to solve mazes, and he loved to create them even more. He was so fascinated with mazes that it’s no surprise he can so easily come up with an observation like this. This only proves to show that a single, powerful, infatuation can teach you a great deal.…
Christopher Columbus was the catalyst that would forever change the lives of the indigenous population of Central and South America. Catholicism would become the standard for religion as it would take the lead to provide the one true God. Catholicism had the true representative of God on earth in the form of the Pope. The Catholic church for the first time would tolerate the co-mingling of other religions as long as they followed along with Catholic tradition.…
Using the knowledge I received while reading the novel “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer” I created a book cover with symbols that represent the plotline. In my book cover I chose a series of images that includes a white fence, a paint brush, a paint bucket, a large tree, map and marbles. With the symbol of the tree and the map, I used my knowledge of the finally of novel to give a slight insight into the ending of the novel. In the ending of novel, Tom and Huck find gold coins after, Tom is trapped inside of a cave and is able to locate the hidden treasure of Injun Joe. After Tom found the location of treasure he invited Huck to go and gather the coins with him. The tree is present to symbolize the scene where Tom…
It was early September when two hunters arrived at the old bus that housed Chris McCandless throughout his adventure in Alaska. When Chris embarked on this expedition, he probably would’ve never realize that it was going to be his last thing he did. The novel Into the wild by John Krakauer, explains Chris’s life up until his last moments. Chris arrived at the bus in May of 1992 and lived in there for about 100 days before he passed away. Even though Chris made some decisions that were pretty questionable, the reason he left was to find himself, not commit suicide: “Driving west out of Atlanta, he intended to invent an utterly new life for himself, one in which he would be free to wallow in unfiltered experience. To symbolize complete severance from his previous life, he even adopted a new name. No longer would he answer to Chris McCandless; he was now alexander Supertramp, master of his own destiny.”(Krakauer 22-23). Someone who was suicidal wouldn’t want to start a complete new life for themselves…
deaths within her life. As she remembers these moments she is drawn back to her old life mentally and eventually physically as well.…
High Plains Drifter was not the typical western that I thought it was going to be; however, I am a fan of Clint Eastwood and I really enjoyed this movie. I noticed a lot of symbolism that was used in this movie. The first example of symbolism I saw was Mordecai. I believe Mordecai and the way he presented himself really symbolized the good that was left in Lago- small, abused, and overshadowed. Another example of symbolism was the whip. I believed the whip to not only be a weapon but to be a symbol of power. Back in the day and maybe still do this day humans used whips on animals and it was used on slaves many years ago. I believed the whip to have demonstrated the power of the one with the whip and the one without the…