"On the rainy river and the red convertible" Essays and Research Papers

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    Rivers Flowing through "On the Rainy River" and the "Red Convertible" Rivers constantly flow‚ never stopping to take a break. Rivers symbolize no beginning or end. They are rather continuousness and ever gushing‚ sometimes elegantly and other times rigidly. Rivers are powerful and almighty‚ carrying with it anything that crosses its path and stopping only to none. Rivers define boundaries‚ and create obstacles for people when they encounter one another. In "On the Rainy River" by Tim O’Brien

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    Diana Nguyen English 2 Pre-AP 2 5 November 2013 On The Rainy River prompt In Tim O’Brien’s “On the Rainy River”‚ Tim is presented with a conflict that would change his life depending on which choice he makes. Tim narrates the story in a mix of present day and flashbacks‚ being that the voice of the younger Tim O’Brien is less mature and less morally complex than present day Tim. In the summer of 1968‚ Tim‚ a recent college graduate‚ receives a draft notice to fight in The Vietnam War. This

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    The story‚ “The Red Convertible”‚ by Louise Erdrich is narrated by Lyman Lamartine. The story embarks on two Native American brothers named‚ Lyman and Henry. The setting is based on a reservation named Chippewa in North Dakota. The brothers have a great bond. Henry is a comical brother who seems to have a great sense of humor. Lyman is an entrepreneur; he knows how to make money. One day the brothers decide to buy a red convertible olds. The convertible‚ which the brothers share‚ seems to bring the

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    element present in writing. “The Red Convertible‚” a short story written by Louise Erdrich‚ tells the story of the destructive nature of war. With the name in the title‚ it is only natural that the convertible plays a very important role in the short story. The condition of the car throughout the story shows the stages of a relationship between two brothers. The main characters in the story‚ Lyman and Henry Lamartine‚ develop an inseparable bond through a red convertible. Their relationship changed drastically

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    “The Red Convertible” a Formalist Criticism While reading the story The Red Convertible of the series Love Medicine‚ the author Louise Erdrich portrays two Indian brothers and their connection to a red convertible. Far more than being a shiny car‚ the red old convertible portrays many meanings through the cultural and is very symbolic. The car carries the audience from its lighthearted and carefree beginning to its movingly tragic end. The red convertible brings together the two brothers in

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    communities or the lack thereof. In the story “The Red Convertible”‚ Louise Erdrich employs images associated with freedom as ironies in order to argue that the “American Dream” is a farce as the stereotypes attached to individual communities‚ in this case‚ the Native American communities will never be broken and the believe in such dreams will eventually lead to life-altering and undesirable outcomes. Erdrich consistently uses the image of the convertible that the brothers bought which would usually

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    author to tell the story in their own words and in another way ot strategie thereby changing the main idea of the real story. Dealing with characters‚ non-fiction involves real people who were present but fiction only creates characters. In ‘On a Rainy River’‚ the author seems to be physically calm especially while talking to the old man. But he has a lot of negative thoughts about going to the war as well. He is more of a coward because he was scared to go fight and did not have the courage to stand

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    A Deconstruction of the Themes of The Red Convertible The Red Convertible is the story about the trials and tribulations of two brothers‚ Lyman and Henry‚ and their red convertible. The story covers the relationship between the brothers from the rime when they buy the red convertible to the time when Henry and the convertible drown in a raging river (Dorris‚ Edrich and Chavkin 14). In the story‚ the red convertible is used to symbolize the ups and downs of the two brothers’ relationship. The car

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    The Red Convertible In the criticism by Pratima Dutta “Erdrich’s the Red Convertible” she presented valid arguments that Louise Erdrich‚ the author of the story “The Red Convertible”‚ is a nationalist of the Native American culture despite her frequent use of symbols of the western civilization in the text of the story. Pratima claimed that the tragedy of Henry was in his inability to resist the influence of the western civilization‚ though she failed to address contradictory evidence in the story

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    Through his piece‚ “On the Rainy River‚” author Tim O’Brien uses varied sentence structure to portray an dissatisfied and stressed tone‚ by interrupting long-winded thoughts and tangents with sharp and poignant realizations to express his apprehension surrounding his escape to Canada after being drafted to the Vietnam War. O’Brien exemplifies this when he states‚ “Getting chased by the Border Patrol- helicopters and searchlights and barking dogs – I’d be crashing through the woods‚ I’d be down on

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