Preview

The Red Convertible

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
677 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Red Convertible
Symone Jackson
English 1102
June 18, 2012 “The Red Convertible and Symbolism” In Louise Erdrich 's short story, "The Red Convertible," she portrays the change that war imposes on the relationship of two brothers, Henry and Lyman. She uses symbolism to reveal the hardships Henry brings back from Vietnam, and she also uses it to show how Lyman dealt with the separation and the effect of the war on his brother. Edrich’s main purpose in “The Red Convertible” is to communicate the emotional afflictions war has on a soldier and his or her relationships through symbolism. Throughout the story Edrich uses the red convertible as the main symbol in the story because the red convertible symbolizes Henry and Lyman’s friendship. At the beginning of the story, the brothers use all their money to purchase a red Oldsmobile which they shared. They went everywhere together in the red Oldsmobile. They used the Oldsmobile to travel to Canada and around the continent together. In this part of the story the convertible represented the fun and extreme closeness of their relationship before the war. When Henry is drafted and goes to war, their relationship changes and Lyman demonstrates their separation by taking the car apart. When Henry returns from the war he is a scarred and changed man; he loses his usual interest in the convertible, as well as in Lyman and their friendship. Lyman bangs the car up, as a result of being neglected by Henry. The car portrays the "banged up" relationship he feels between his brother and himself. When Henry sees and realizes that the car, as well as his relationship with Lyman is damaged, he confronts Lyman. "When I left, that car was running like a watch. Now I don 't even know if I can get it to start again, let alone get it anywhere near its old condition" (pg397). When Henry expresses this concern about bringing the car back to its old condition Erdrich uses symbolism here to express the concerns



Cited: Edrich, Louise. “The Red Convertible.” In Literature and the Writing Process. By Elizabeth McMahan, Susan X Day, and Robert Funk. NJ: Prentice Hall, 2005. Pages 395-398.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    “He has his field jacket on and the worn-in clothes he’d come back in and kept wearing ever since”(Erdrich 372), represents how war changed him, the depression that the war brought to him made him change the way he was to the point that he did not even dress the same way anymore. At this same time Erdrich uses a photograph to compare Henry and Lyman, “My face is right out in the sun big and round” (Erdrich 372) which he uses to demonstrate just how peaceful Lyman’s face is. “But he might have drawn back, because the shadows on his face are deep as holes. There are two shadows curved like little hooks around the ends of his smile, as if to frame it and try to keep it there- that one, first smile that looked like it might have hurt his face” (Erdrich 372) described how depressed Henry looked and the emotional problems that war had implanted in him. While Lyman’s calm face represents someone who has not been through the struggles of war, Henry’s face represents the sorrow and pain that war brings into a person’s life. By doing this Erdrich once more lets us see just how far apart and different the two brother are from one another and that the cause of this separation between the two of them is ultimately war and the horrifying events that Henry had to go…

    • 1137 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The stories "Love in L.A." and the "Red Convertible" compares and contrasts in a couple ways. In both stories the car is used to progress through problems and to start problems. The setting, plot, characters, and other factors make both stories have common features and differ. Jake in the "Love in L.A." and Henry from "Red Convertible" both compare dramatically, though they contrast also. Settings in both short stories differ from country to city. In both stories the car causes conflict but also bring the characters together.…

    • 548 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Louise Erdich’s “The Red Convertible” Henry and Lyman buy a red Convertible Oldsmobile. Erdich uses the car to portray the brothers’ relationship. The car like the relationship started off good and strong, then turned rough and finally disappeared altogether.…

    • 780 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    One would think that since Henry and Lyman both worked so hard that they would have a car. Lyman says, "Don't ask me why, because we never mentioned a car or anything, we just had all our money" (Lamartine, 365). It was not until they saw this red convertible that they decided to purchase a vehicle. Lyman was very excited the first time he saw the red convertible. The brothers had been to busy working and living their day to day lives that they did not spend much time together but this red convertible was the rebirth or start of something new for them. Lyman felt as if the car was alive.…

    • 874 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “The Red Convertible” by Louise Erdrich is a story about two young brothers named Henry Junior and Lyman Lamartine that have a strong relationship until Henry junior is drafted and sent away to the war in Vietnam. “The Red Convertible” shows that returning veterans face troubles, such as problems with family relationships; war changes Henry’s his personality and causes him to have PTSD.…

    • 738 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    “… she shrank down to an ancient little girl, loose skin and bones so light…

    • 332 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    When Henry returns home he is different, very quiet, so quiet and never comfortable sitting still anywhere but always up and moving around. Lyman describes, Henry of being jumpy and mean. (Erdrich 403). The convertible symbolizes how brothers express the concern over how relationship can change when soldiers cannot adequately express nor talk openly about thing that happen on a war torn battlefield, without proper medical treatment for PTSD. As he does not feel like the person he was before he went to serve for his county.…

    • 515 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The brother he cherished and missed during those years appears to be miles away even though he is standing right in front of him. Studies have shown that “antisocial behavior is another important factor associated with exposure to war zone combat and PTSD symptoms in national samples of Vietnam veterans” (Dillard 2). Lyman realizes that his brother’s spirit is broken and with it the bond the used to share. It is during this realization that he thinks of the car, and what it represents to both himself and his brother. He sees in the car a means to bring Henry back. So, he grabs a hammer and destroys all the work he’d done on the convertible while his brother was gone. Now, the car is nothing more than a barely drivable pile of junk, much like the relationship between Lyman and Henry. However, the act had the effect Lyman was hoping for. As Henry begins to spend time fixing the vehicle, we see through Lyman’s eyes how his brother becomes slightly more personable and the image of his old self slowly begins to reappear just as the condition of the convertible also…

    • 1179 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The description of Arnold Friend is suggestive of an evil or devilish archetype. He is threatening and demanding to Connie with his requests and his appearance, described by the author as “shaggy, shabby black hair that looked crazy as a wig” and how his “eyes were like chips of glass” is questionable, possibly indicating a demonic nature. Arnold’s car is representative of the mode of transportation of Connie to her new life as a grown woman. It is the ‘vehicle’ that will allow the transition to her adulthood.…

    • 766 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the short story called “The Red Convertible” by Louise Erdrich, focuses on those who are left behind and going off to war. Stephan is Marty’s older brother, one summer before Stephan goes off to the Army they buy a red convertible together and travel all over the United States meeting new people and exploring new places. As they get back home the car breaks down and Stephan leaves for two years, during that time Marty fixes the car and is in perfect condition. A Stephan that was once nice, funny and couldn’t keep quiet came back a different person; when Stephan came back everything about him changed he was quiet, never comfortable sitting in a single place, was constantly moving around and mean. One night Marty was so angered by his brother’s personality that he went and smashed the red convertible up until it was all damages, a few months after Stephan fixed it up. After Stephan finished fixing it he asked Marty to go see the high water at the Red River. This is where Marty finally said to Stephan, “Wake up, wake up, wake up (Page.6)! Stephan broke down and told his brother he knew, but it was useless because he could not help it. After this conversation Stephan tells his brother he wants to give him the car but Marty refuses the offer, both being buzzed they start fighting; then stop and laugh it off. Stephan gets hot goes into the river and gets swept away by the current, never to be seen again.…

    • 329 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the beginning of the story, Lyman and Henry go in together and purchase a red Oldsmobile convertible. In the beginning the condition of the convertible was fantastic. Although the story never clearly stated whether the car was brand new or not, the brothers drove the car on a summer road trip all over the country including Alaska and back. “We’d made most of the trip, that summer, without putting up the car hood at all. We got home just in time.” (Erdrich 327) Not only does this passage show the condition of the car being very well, but the relationship between Lyman and Henry being strong as well. During the whole road trip the brothers were very content with each other. They stopped and enjoyed their freedom on the road at every chance they got, and loved every minute of the trip together as brothers.…

    • 776 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “The Red Convertible” is a short story by Louis Erdrich, in which two native American brothers named Marty and Henry decide to buy a red convertible Oldsmobile together. The two brothers spend much of the summer travelling around together in the car until the older brother, Stephan, is deployed to Vietnam. When Stephan returns, he is not the same and Marty tries desperately to recover their past relationship. The round, static, perseverant character of Marty in “The Red Convertible” is revealed through the first person point of view.…

    • 637 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    James Dickey Symbolism

    • 317 Words
    • 2 Pages

    teenagers is their passion and their lust just like the old cars. Once someone had a passion for the old cars, and once upon a time someone was in a lust by the old car as well. The speaker himself or should we say as readers James Dickey that he reads the lives of past generations into their wrecked vehicles. One example of the speaker putting lives into their wrecked and old vehicles is when he was in the front of the car imaging people in the car through the back window, and when he imagines the old lady taking toys to the orphanage. The type of symbolism that the author uses for putting people’s lives work in two different types of ways. The symbolism shows how the authors mind can make a setting or playgrounds anywhere it must a prime example of the author making a setting is when he turned the junkyard into a paradise. The symbolism of the author putting new lives or the owner’s old life’s into dead cars also shows how anything can become subject to age and deterioration.…

    • 317 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The Haunting of Hill House

    • 2050 Words
    • 9 Pages

    I choose to interpret the representation of cars in The Haunting of Hill House. In this novel, a car is first represented as a means of control over Eleanor by her sister (Jackson 7). However, Eleanor’s stealing of the car transforms the car into a representation of freedom from her present life (Jackson 10). The car allows Eleanor to be free of her controlled life and to begin her own journey (Jackson 10). We observe the same car at the conclusion of the novel as a device used to free herself from her forced departure of Hill House (Jackson 178). She uses the car to commit suicide, allowing her to stay at Hill House indefinitely (Jackson 182). I argue that in the novel the car is utilized for control over Eleanor but ultimately for her personal freedom. The car is what liberates Eleanor from her life prior to Hill House and also from her forced departure. I will also argue that the significance of Eleanor’s car being used for freedom is that it shows the transformation of Eleanor’s mental state. The difference in Eleanor’s idea of freedom, travel versus suicide, makes the demise of Eleanor’s mental state evident.…

    • 2050 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Death of a Salesman

    • 558 Words
    • 3 Pages

    I will talk more about Rubber Hose/ Car. These symbols are very important because they bring us Willy’s flashbacks, we see his past life. Cars symbolize his mental and social well-being. By this time he owns a Chevvy, he says that it is the best car in the world. “Chevrolet, Linda, is the greatest car ever built.” ( page 22). He always remembers that red Chevvy that he had in 1928. That car brings him the flashback about the times when Biff and Happy were still in high school, how they used to simonize the car. Cars are also a symbol of change in this book, Willy says: ”The street is lined with cars. There’s not a breath of fresh…

    • 558 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays