Repeatedly throughout the beginning of part two, Pi uses several negative connotations to describe the hyena. He calls it “ugly beyond redemption (Martel 248)” before going on to explain the animal’s typical traits. Pi narrates that “cannibalism is a common occurrence during the excitement of feeding [in hyenas]…it feels no disgust at this mistake. A hyena will drink from water even as it is urinating in it. Hyenas will snack on the excrement of herbivores with clucks of pleasure…It’s an open question as to what hyenas won’t eat (Martel 250-251).” These distasteful traits are similar to the chef’s own. In the story without the animals, Pi tells of an incident on the lifeboat; “he ate flies. The cook, that is…we had food to last us for weeks; we had fishing gear…yet there he was, swinging his arms and catching flies and eating them greedily…he was a disgusting man (Martel 629).” This shows the correlation between the hyena and chef’s eagerness to eat anything, no matter what it is. Another characteristic the hyena and cook share is the cook’s willingness to cannibalize. Not even a second after the sailor died, the chef butchered his body and devoured it, even using some pieces as bait (Martel 636-637). He then later moved on to killing Pi’s mother and cannibalizing some parts of her body (Martel 641). Like the hyena, he felt no remorse or disgust for his
Repeatedly throughout the beginning of part two, Pi uses several negative connotations to describe the hyena. He calls it “ugly beyond redemption (Martel 248)” before going on to explain the animal’s typical traits. Pi narrates that “cannibalism is a common occurrence during the excitement of feeding [in hyenas]…it feels no disgust at this mistake. A hyena will drink from water even as it is urinating in it. Hyenas will snack on the excrement of herbivores with clucks of pleasure…It’s an open question as to what hyenas won’t eat (Martel 250-251).” These distasteful traits are similar to the chef’s own. In the story without the animals, Pi tells of an incident on the lifeboat; “he ate flies. The cook, that is…we had food to last us for weeks; we had fishing gear…yet there he was, swinging his arms and catching flies and eating them greedily…he was a disgusting man (Martel 629).” This shows the correlation between the hyena and chef’s eagerness to eat anything, no matter what it is. Another characteristic the hyena and cook share is the cook’s willingness to cannibalize. Not even a second after the sailor died, the chef butchered his body and devoured it, even using some pieces as bait (Martel 636-637). He then later moved on to killing Pi’s mother and cannibalizing some parts of her body (Martel 641). Like the hyena, he felt no remorse or disgust for his