Steven Herrick’s work of “By the river” displays a bildungsroman novel in which harry goes on a journey through life, facing love and loss.…
He watches her for a time as her face voids of all emotion, all evidence of thought. He thinks of the Grand Canyon, which they visited shortly after he retired from the factory on disability. On his first day without a job, he cashed in almost all their chips and bought a motor home. They drove it all over the country – but first, to the Grand Canyon. They called it The Big Adventure, their three year jaunt from one ocean to the other and back again. They felt so young during that time.…
Cheryl Strayed writes about her experience hiking the “PCT”, otherwise known as the Pacific Crest Trail. Wild is an autobiography. I found that really interesting because you get to read and hear Cheryl’s actual experience first-hand. The Pacific Crest Trail reaches from Mexico to Canada on the western coast of the United States. At the beginning of the book Cheryl explains her past and what brought her to her decision of hiking over 2,000 miles. Her mom dying and divorcing her husband were two factors that helped make her decision. As she begins her hike, it is evident that her life is about to change.…
Cheryl Strayed, one of the few women to hike the Pacific Crest Trail and leave her past behind to find a new. Which is what the book “Wild” is about, with the death of her mother and family slowly breaking away, she was left with no other choice but to leave it behind and begin a journey. A journey that would be long, tedious and demanding, all for the sake of finding the true meaning of life, something that would help her reconcile with people who she had drifted apart from. Following her mistakes, achievements, interaction and ideology, everything that led up to the conclusion of her journey. Something that “Into the Wild” can relate to, with the survival and story of Christopher McCandless.…
Everyone is caught up with the idea of having to live a certain way and follow certain life steps. Many people forget to recall that it is acceptable to be overwhelmed with life and wanting to leave everything and everyone behind. In his book Into The Wild Jon Krakauer is trying to discover one of the many who left everything behind, Chris McCandless motive on why he went on this journey. Krakauer wanted the reader to know that McCandless represents the adventure, independence, and weakness of every human being.…
1. How does the opening quote from a midsummer nights dream set the scene for the play that is to come? – The quote from the opening scene of A Midsummer Nights Dream starts off with a play suggesting that the tone could be much the same as the play ‘Away’. In a Midsummers Night’s Dream Puck comes off as a Trickster, as Tom plays Puck in the play this could be suggesting that something may just happen to Tom and he will come to obstacles through the play.…
Have you ever wanted to escape from your old life and start a new one? Well Chris McCandless did. Chris McCandless was a transcendentalist (a person that analyzes the process of nature) that wanted to forget about his past . McCandless didn't want to live the same life anymore, he was set out to show his love for nature. McCandless travelled through North America living with harsh necessities and off the land. Throughout McCandless’ adventures of “Into the Wild” he shows how he forgets the past and moves on to be a transcendentalist while he sets out to show his love for nature.…
F. Scott Fitzgerald once wrote “With people like us our home is where we are not … No one person is necessary to you or me,” (This Side of Paradise). This quote describes how some people can become consumed with a feeling called wanderlust, or the overwhelming feeling of needing to travel to new places. In his nonfiction book “Into The Wild” (1996), Jon Krakauer constructs Chris McCandless’ character into that of an wanderlusting alter ego. Krakauer completes this idea by implying throughout chapter three that Chris McCandless was idealistic with his nonconformist philosophy, unprepared for hardships before he disappeared, and by indicating McCandless had a secret sociopathic nature. He illustrates rhetorical devices in order to give insight into why McCandless’ death was important, and to crucially build his character. Krakauer aims his book towards an audience who is interested in exploring or adventuring, or anyone McCandless-esque who may aspire to pull off a stunt like lone traveling to Alaska with no money or supplies.…
Set in the Australian summer of 1967, Michael Gow’s Away is an elaborate play which explores the ideas of self- discovery and change. Through the war affected nation, three families, each from different social classes, depart on an iconic Australian holiday to the beach. In the play, Gow utilises the characters to demonstrate that going away physically is intrinsically linked to their mental developments. With the help of references to Shakespeare’s A Midsummer night’s Dream, Away uses Gwen and Coral to show the significant psychological changes made by the characters during holidays to the coast. Tom throughout the play acts as a catalyst for the change in other characters and is associated with Puck in A Midsummer Night’s Dream.…
The movie Wild is a journey film about a woman escaping a destructive life and turning to the outdoors to cleanse her mind and assist her in thinking clearly. The main character Cheryl, played by Reese Witherspoon, chooses to hike one of the longest and toughest trails in the country, and while impressively unprepared, she sticks to her wits and treks on. A substantial portion of the transcendentalist midst is relating yourself to, appreciating and taking advantage of nature; Cheryl is able to do this and use the world, heaven, around her to help her own spirit and…
Never Cry Wolf But Always Cry Truth When Wolf pups are born they are both deaf and blind, weighing only one pound, and then when they grow up they are ferocious killers, or are they? In the book Never Cry Wolf (1963) by Farley Mowat. Mowat was sent out by the government to go see if the wolves were killing all the caribou. Mowat use of ethos, humor, and personification to make me believe that the wolves are more curious and not a ferocious killer. First, Mowat used ethos to convince us the wolves aren't the real problem.…
Gwen Harwood’s work frequently focuses on woman being demoralised by society’s practices that reduce her to a lesser being. A common worldwide value that Harwood rejects as the normality in life with her poems. Harwood battles against the traditions that she believes support this downgrading by continually returning to the issue. Due to Harwood’s existence in a time where women of Australia still fought to vote and for a pay check to match a man’s, Harwood too displays her support. “The Lions Bride” is centred on the subject of marriage and entails the ugliness of the situations that are specific to women. This remains relevant to the modern world because of the ongoing struggle for equality. By using a wedding as a platform to highlight societies imposed traditions on females she seeks to shock the conventional expectations by demonising the widely romantisied event. Harwood extends this and questions treatment of women in the world before any vows are made.…
Jon Krakauer’s Into the Wild is the story of a young man who wished to begin anew by changing his name and leaving all of his monetary belongings behind to experience the beauty of the Alaskan wilderness. Of course his actions were affected by more than wishing to see the Alaskan wilderness and becoming a new person. He had an awful relationship with his father and wished to get away from him, although he disliked his father it is clear he respects his father’s wishes for his educational success. It is shown by his final connection with his father as well as his family, he sends a copy of his final transcript and a short note saying that it will be the last…
her hike. Strayed has first-hand experience in tragedy because she lost her mother, got divorced,…
To the uninitiated, the significance of Flannery O 'Connor 's Parker 's Back can seem at once cold and dispassionate, as well as almost absurdly stark and violent. Her short stories routinely end in horrendous, freak fatalities or, at the very least, a character 's emotional devastation. Flannery O 'Connor is a Christian writer, and her work is message-oriented, yet she is far too brilliant a stylist to tip her hand; like all good writers, crass didacticism is abhorrent to her. Unlike some more cryptic writers, O 'Connor was happy to discuss the conceptual and philosophical underpinnings of her stories, and this candor is a godsend for the researcher that seeks to know what makes the writer tick.…