The theme of Touching Spirit Bear is that you can always change yourself for the better. Cole went through some rough times as a child which caused his actions to be pretty dumb…
Who is Cole Mathews? Cole Mathews is the main character in the book “Touching Spirit Bear” by Ben Mikaelsen. In characteristics Cole is angry young man who wants to get attention from his divorced parents. Cole has a warm heart inside but because of his parents and some problems such as not having friends and not having the place where you feel comfortable. He is very cold to everyone until he learns new lessons on the island. The island for him is like a transformation. He starts from an angry liar boy who wants to fight and comes back as a honest friend which will help you in any situation. He becomes a self-controller of his emotions.…
In the early stages of the novel, the conflict which sets the entire story in motion takes place as Cole’s mother has decided to sell the ranch now that his grandfather has died. Cole is distraught over this as the ranch is his desired lot in life. He attempts to talk to the family’s attorney after attempts at persuasion with his mother fail only to reach similar end. The reasoning the attorney postulates for his mother’s decision is a minute detail of the scene but brings about an interesting and potentially underlying idea throughout the story. His rationalizes her motives on the basis that, “she’s a young woman and my guess is that she’s like to have a little more social life than what she’s used to” (McCarthy 17). This determination does not come off as explicitly judgmental but simply a plausibly suggestion for her actions. Upon closer examination however, it proves to be more meaningful.…
James Merrill uses many metaphors to make his readers contemplate. These metaphors are beautiful, ingenious and most important, reasonable. It is wonderful that he can express his opinion through such a short,…
Mcmurphy is telling Chief that he is growing to motivate him and make him stronger. This is also evident when Chief tries to lift the control panel in the tub room. Mcmurphy told Chief to try lifting the panel even though, Chief did not believe he could lift it “I went to the panel just to show him I couldn’t do it”(pg 206). In reality he actually did lift it, showing Chief that he is growing as an individual. Later Chief comments on how Mcmurphy has helped him by says, “how he’d helped me get my size back”( pg 206). Chief no longer feels repressed by society because he found Mcmurphy to guide him and find his strength. At the end of the novel, Chief escapes the hospital by throwing the panel at the window “I put my back toward the screen, then spun and let the momentum carry the panel through the Screen and window with a ripping crash”(pg 250). Mcmurphy being an inspiration and a motivator helped Chief escape the hospital that has been repressing him. Chief has developed his perspective of himself. He sees himself as more grown in size and that gave him the ability to stand up to authority figures such as big…
McCandless was raised in a family that started from the bottom, attended college, and raised their children in a loving home. But McCandless was not anything like his peers, or the people of his generation because he refused to spend more time then he had to on trivial matters. To McCandless, trivial matters were technological equipment, college, romantic involvement, and abiding by the norms established by society. Those things made him seem dangerous, but really they made him more fragile because he had a higher plan for himself than the rest of the world did.…
Ed Young also uses scale and dimension to emphasize the plot of the story. Visual scale deals with the proximity of objects in an image. The illustration of the girls in the tree is a great example of this. The girls at the top are drawn larger than the wolf in the bottom of the picture. "This gives the perception of distance," (Anderson, 2006). The reader also feels as though the girls must maintain this distance in order to survive. Mr. Young also uses dimension in his illustrations. Dimension uses shading to show shadows and make a flat object appear to have depth. We can see examples of this on the girls ' faces.…
In the novel, Wright commonly uses similes. He writes, “Mixed images of violence ran like sand through his mind, dry and fast, vanishing” (34). Comparing Bigger’s thoughts to quick-moving sand, Wright describes Bigger’s coursing emotions which preceded his fight with Gus.…
Chapter 2 reads to me as Einstein’s Theory of Relativity. It says that what is defined as beautiful is possible only when compared to what is ugly. Likewise, what is ugly is only definable compared to what is beautiful. It gives other examples of paradoxical unity. Often what we see is relative to another that opposes: good and bad; being and non-being; difficult and easy; long and short; high and low; before and after.…
Throughout this seemingly simple plot Wilder illustrates the relationship of the individual to the vastness of the universe, in fact, it is the simplicity of the plot that allows this topic to be addressed.…
Have you ever broken down an object, and examined the many little components that it is constructed with? What about examining the material it is made of, as well as the material that holds it together? For example, let’s take an artist and his sculpted pot. To fully examine these two entities, we must consider every type of force brought together that holds the object. Why did the sculptor create this pot? What aspirations or goals did the sculptor try to fulfill with creating this pot? What materials did the sculptor use, and what qualities did he already have that contributed to the final product? Behind every human, action, object, and idea there are many forces that mold them and have many little parts working to create the final result of them. In Tess of the D’Urbervilles, Hardy shows the audience the different and similar outside and inner forces that mold Angel and Alec’s actions, and how ultimately those forces are what shape their actions and fate, one of whom is successful and the other whose fate ends tragically.…
To the Romantics, the natural world was a sanctuary in which individuals were entitled the right to self-expression and connection to the raw marrow of existence. In This Lime Tree Bower my Prison, Samuel Taylor Coleridge outlines how an appreciation of nature (a highly Romantic outlook) may result in a greater understanding of Self and connection to others, as well as to the universe and beyond. In his imaginative journey, Coleridge (1797) stimulates the reader’s senses with his vivid description of the “roaring dell, o’erwooded, narrow, deep”. The onomatopoeic resonance of “roaring” is repeated to resemble the continual sound produced by the moving water, outlining Coleridge’s detailed use of imagination to psychologically transport himself to the described site. From this, Coleridge is celebrating his newfound realisation of self, that he is simply…
The Universe is commonly defined as the totality of everything that exists, including all physical matter and energy, the planets, stars, galaxies, and the contents of intergalactic space. To ponder over the vastness that we on Earth are suspended in is, quite frankly, amazing. To be able to inspire this awe and amazement in people through writing is an even greater feat. Carl Sagan, the author of “Pale Blue Dot,” uses scale to draw relevance to the perspective that we are insignificant and tiny in comparison to the Universe that surrounds us. His writing style is reflective, presenting the information in a way that inspires a sense of wonderment in his readers. This sense of wonderment can also be seen in many of Neil deGrasse Tyson’s works, who accredits Carl Sagan as a main influential factor in his scientific endeavors. Tyson also employs scale in his writings, but focuses more on the insignificance of people and their actions in the Universe. Both of these men apply the use of scale to change the perspective of our place in the Universe while also instilling a sense of awe and wonderment.…
The center of Villa's universe is man, the puny inhabitant of a tiny planet, and the poet measures him fearlessly in the scale of perfection, which is God. He affirms God with a lyric exaltation allied to the religious mystics. Yet, on behalf of man, he challeges God in a daring afirmation that the creature made in His image contains in himself the seeds of His perfection.…
As all earthlings know, Romanticism was a movement that rejected the ways of aristocracy with all its discriminating devices and industrial revolution with all its materialistic practices. Coleridge as a member of Romanticism shouldn’t defend this ideal of neo-classicism which is source of his denials. This stand of his, confuses readers and as a reader I find it disturbing too. But he was not perfect as all men weren’t and this speech is tolerable if we consider his qualities of choosing themes and topics of literary work. I like his ideas about using supernatural elements in literature. With the absence of metaphysical and intangible themes life is not worth living. The realities of life are just unbearable and a good conducted poetry about a supernatural creature which sucks of…