As part of a book project, I read "The Red Badge of Courage." It is about a soldier named Henry who wants to earn his mark as a soldier. Initially he strays away from the battlefield because he is afraid of death and wants to live among the living and not the dead. Later, he becomes desperate to get shot and earn his "Red Badge of Courage" to prove to the other soldier that he is not only a man but a true hero. The purpose of this project was to write a journal entry for a series of chapters and note rhetorical strategies used by the author. A author's purpose is then written in MLA format to compare the author to the book and learn more about the author in general. At the end of the book, we were to conduct a presentation about the book and…
Not any two characters in the novel have the same motivation for fighting. Robert E. Lee is a well-respected soldier who is nearing the end of his career. He uses the Battle at Gettysburg as one of his motivations to keep his faith. He is a heavily religious man and he lets faith play a huge part in his decisions. Lee’s home state is Virginia and becomes involved in the war when Virginia chose to take part in the war. James Longstreet has endured many hardships. His three children have died from illness the winter before the battle. He hopes for success. A lot of his ideas for how the war can be won are not current with his fellow soldiers. Joshua Chamberlain as the main voice for the Union and a significantly lower rank than the other…
Red Badge of Courage is about a young soldier named Henry Fleming,who is drafted during the war. The book traces the thread of emotions and reactions to events that he goes through, in the civil war. Being an an average farmer from New York, Henry wanted to go to war and become a hero like the ones he has read about in his school. The book starts off with a bunch of boys sitting at camp by the river, and while everyone is thinking about what they will do in war and how heroic they would be, Henry was thinking of how he would react when he goes to the battlefields. How would he react if he was severely injured or even died? Though he said that, no matter what happens he will not run from a fight or a battle, he did, during the second war, when he was scared and he saw a few other soldiers scamper due to the smoke. Henry kept telling himself through and through that he was protecting himself, even when the…
“The Red Badge of Courage requires a less restricted from of reference, for Solomon realizes that Crane was not directing his attention against the Cooke-Cable-George Eggleston celebration of heroism. Instead he found his real subject in the psychology of motivation under stress and anticipated a view of warfare which had become almost universal in our own country.”(web) There is not many books that have been published in the view of a young soldier from the civil war period, and this book gives the reader a glimpse inside of solider mind. “The youth, in his leapings, saw, as through a mist, a picture of four or five men stretched upon the ground or writhing upon their knees with bowed heads as if they had been stricken by bolts from the sky. Tottering among them was the rival color bearer, whom the youth saw had been bitten vitally by the bullets of the last formidable volley. He perceived this man fighting a last struggle, the struggle of one whose legs are grasped by demons. It was a ghastly battle. Over his face was the bleach of death, but set upon it was the dark and hard lines of desperate purpose. With this terrible grin of resolution he hugged his precious flag to him and was stumbling and staggering in his design to go the way that led to safety for it.” (book) Solomon really gives credit to Crane for writing his book in this fashion and credits this book one of Cranes best works. “Solomon has an acute sense for telling word and image, and without straining has revealed the complexity of texture in the best of Crane’s work.” (web) After reading the critics work I believe that Solomon wrote this because he agrees with Cranes prospective on how young boys grew into men in a time of war. They all start out scared and weak, but by the end they are strong and mighty. Solomon…
War forces young soldiers to grow up quickly in Stephen Crane’s immortal masterpiece about the nightmare of war was first published in 1895 and brought its young author immediate international fame. Set during the Civil War, it tells of the brutal disillusionment of a young recruit by the name of Henry Fleming who had dreamed of the thrill and glory of war, only to find himself fleeing the horror of a battlefield. Shame over his cowardice drives him to seek to redeem himself by being wounded; earning what he calls the “red badge of courage.” Praised for its psychological insight and its intense and unprecedented realism in portraying the experience of men under fire, The Red Badge of Courage has been a bestseller for…
The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane tells a story about a youth, Henry Fleming, who is eager to fight in the American Civil War because of the glory of victory. Once he was officially in the military, he realized that war wasn’t all he thought it would be. His regiment mostly just marched from place to place. The lack of fighting made Henry begin to doubt his decision to go against his mother’s wishes and join the war. When his regiment finally went to battle, Henry experienced things that made him mature from a boy to a man in a matter of days.…
The Catcher in the Rye and The Red Badge of Courage detail the gradual maturation of two immature boys into self-reliant young men. The steady speed at which Salinger's and Crane's language streams enables the reader to see the independent events that lead up to the ultimate rite of passage for both Henry and Holden. Although the pinnacle of maturity Holden reached concerned his pessimistic view of the world and Henry's was a unifying moment of bravery, both boys experienced an epiphany over the course of their respective tales. Holden came to a realization in the timeless peace of an Egyptian tomb that forced him to reevaluate his immature and selfish views. His new attitude was first displayed while he watched Phoebe snatch at the gold rings of the Central Park carousel. Henry found his manhood during the fierce chaos of battle. These final rites of passage differ in particulars, but their underlying themes possess many similarities.…
The main character of this book is Henry Fleming, mostly referred to as The Youth or Youth. The Youth has dark, curly brown hair also; he is a young teenager and is average height when compared to the Tall Soldier. Henry is insecure because he is going through a difficult stage between being a "man" and being a "boy". Henry can't wait to get to war when he signs up but during the book Henry learns that war has a lot of affects on people emotionally and physically. Henry's flaw is that he is afraid of making himself look bad and he is worried that he is going to be a coward and run away from battle. Henry really wants to be a "man" and be courageous. I once heard a swim coach give an extremely good definition of courage. He said "To me courage is not to be unafraid but it is to be afraid but one does it anyways and doesn't worry about being afraid. I think Henry thought of courageous as fearless and that is also part of his flaw.…
War can make a man forget about other things going on in life and just focus on the war. He wasn’t brave when he left the battle. He wasn’t brave when he lied about his wounds when asked what happened.When he comes back to war for the first time is when he first become courageous. When he runs around with the flag in his hands is also an act of bravery. In the beginning of the book I asked myself, “Would his mother be proud of him leaving the war?” I knew that she wouldn’t because that makes him a coward. He went to war which was very brave of him but he regretted it once it was time to fight. I know now that his mother would be very proud of him and how far along he has came on his journey of war. She would be very proud to have a brave son that is willing to fight for his army and for his…
The Red Badge of Courage was published on October 5, 1895 containing 145 pages of inspirational text. The novel is introduced during the Civil War where the story of Henry Fleming is just beginning to develop. Henry Fleming is a teenager who is enlisted in the Union Army, who was drawn to the glory of war, never realizing what he actually signed up for. He hoped to fulfill his glorious dreams of war, being the best soldier there is until he faces reality. Fleming fears that once engaged in battle, he might flee fearing for his life. As the novel progresses, Fleming’s regiment is called into battle and they march in to fight the Confederates. After a grueling, long march, they hear the distant sounds of gunshots and cannons being fired. Fleming’s 304 Regiment stands in positions as they charge against the enemy and Fleming is not able to flee even if he wanted to being boxed in by his fellow soldiers. Eventually, as the gunshots die down the Union defeats the Confederates and the soldiers congratulate each other on it. Nevertheless, as Henry is taking a nap he wakes abruptly to find the Confederates are attacking his camp. Struck with true terror he flees from…
Roddy Doyle’s bildungsroman, A Star Called Henry, follows the development of Henry Smart Jr. into the near image of his father, Henry Smart Sr. Henry unconsciously embraces his namesake despite comparisons from others, with the adoption of his father’s physical characteristics and in his role as a pawn in the Irish Rebellion. He acquires the identity of Henry Smart Sr., all until his epiphany, when he finally realizes his expendability and his fulfillment of his assassin father’s identity. For much of his journey, it appears that Henry will become his father; however, by desperately abandoning all remnants of his father’s identity, he avoids his harrowing fate.…
The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen crane shows us Henry Fleming's journey through war. Crane develops Fleming by using animal imagery, patterns of speech, and interactions with other characters.…
In “The Red Badge of Courage” by Stephen Crane written in 1895 and set during the civil war, Crane presents a fiction novel on a young man named Henry wanting to become a U.S soldier who discovers the truth of war. He goes to war and figures out the hard way that war is not the place for him until he meets a man name Tall Soldier and that man he meets and looks up to doesn't make it. From that man dieing it shook Henry up and then Henry really thinks hard and figure that his live is on the line it is either die what he wanted to do or get his stuff together and get the business done so he has to take it serious. Henry retreats from the battle and he come upon a building like structure and inside was a body, the body of the Tall soldier.Henry…
To Be a Slave, Like The Red Badge of Courage is refreshing: it shows a period of history in a new light, one that we don’t see in our history textbooks. This book shows slavery for what it really was: a disgusting time full of pain and injustice. Because To Be a Slave is written through first person stories, we as readers get a more accurate portrayal of what slavery was like, rather than the watered down version written in our history books. Slavery was so much more than the “It began, it was bad, it ended with the Civil War” narrative that we are taught. Slaves were real people living real lives, they deserve to have their stories get told, and that’s exactly what Julius Lester did.…
One makes many errors throughout his or her life, yet the way that the individual copes with their imperfections defines their other weaknesses. In most cases, imperfections are found once a single fault is discovered, which may cause the person to grow angered or fretful of their fate as the voices of the world may begin to comment on his or her flaws and it can possibly affect how that person acts in everyday situations which may suggest that the person has more imperfections than once thought. Some may seek final reasoning for their mistakes and problems, but this, in some situations, is not a very truthful or justifiable approach in the eyes of others at first observation. Throughout The Red Badge of Courage, the main character, Henry,…