Pi at first is terrified when he saw Richard Parker on the boat. He thought he would die, and most of the time Pi spent time outside the boat on his other little raft he made himself. Pi began to gain confidence, and would use his religious thoughts. He never gave up, like everyday on that boat he always had something to do. Whether it was for himself or for Richard Parker. Pi didn't let anything or anyone bring him down. God was his guidance through his survival voyage. Joe gains positive mental attitude when he made it out of the crevasse and saw Simon was no where near and told himself he has to make it to the base camp before they leave in a couple of days. Joe was making it through everything with a messed up knee. It didn't stop him from making it, he kept going knowing he'll make it to them with the condition he was…
In Yann Martel’s Life of Pi, Piscine Molitor Patel illustrates the suffering of a survivor following a major traumatic event. After a cargo ship carrying a full zoo and all of Pi’s family sinks, Pi is left with a few animals and his thoughts to keep him company. While at sea, his supplies dwindle and he has to resort to extreme measures. These measures come into full effect when Pi’s boat leads him to another survivor. The characters of Pi and the other survivor, a French man, portray how the need to survive can force these survivors to resort to savage actions.…
At first Pi was telling Richard Parker to get to the boat which could easily be himself telling himself to get to the boat, when he has trouble reaching it he feels the need to give up and just when he was done with trying he is pulled up onto the life boat. After all how could have the tiger jumped onto the boat. The zebra represents a pattern mainly white and black which a sailor could easily represent. The sailor could have been dressed in white and the blood could have been represented by the black. Going on, once the hyena killed the monkey, the Bengal tiger then killed the Hyena. This could have been Pi enraging when the cook killed his mother. Once Pi killed the cook he was completely gone. I feel that Pi was just visioning a tiger and that is why the tiger never harmed him and rarely interacted with him. When Pi found the island I felt that he was simply not ready for real life and so he was drastically scared and so he thought he saw dead fish on the island, which caused him to only explore during the day. The island was considered toxic but no where on this planet has ever been recorded to have found an island so toxic and this 'island' was also never…
John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men contains multitudes of themes in which Steinbeck shows his disgust with society. One such theme is the theme of isolation. Steinbeck portrays isolation through several characters throughout the book. Three characters in particular stand out as isolated. crooks, the only black man, Curley’s wife, who is the only woman on the farm and never named, and Candy, an old man who cannot work very much. These three characters are isolated for different reasons, but all are lonely.…
While reading the book The Life of Pi you come across a ton of themes. There is not just one theme to pick from and the entire book is not just black and white. The Life of Pi is an amazing story about how a young man went against all the odds and survived something that most would see as certain death. The theme that I picked out for this book is the boundaries between humans and animals.…
I thought that this best fit into the plot of the story because imagine what it would’ve been like to be Pi, to manage surviving out of a sinking ship and knowing that all your family members have died in the ship as it sunk deep into the ocean and being stuck in a lifeboat with wild animals not knowing if or when they’re going to eat you. It must have been a…
Pi sees Richard Parker as a companion and not an enemy. So, an emotional need of Pi is companionship and having a sense of purpose. “ It was Richard Parker who calmed me down. It is the irony of this story that the one who scared me witless to start with was the very same who brought me peace, purpose, I dare even say wholeness” (Martel 162). With this said, although Richard Parker may be the one that scared him witless the whole entire time, it kept him alert and gave him a purpose to keep living and stay true to his goals and faith. Next, Pi also needs something to keep his mind busy and sane. So, he creates a schedule. “I kept myself busy. That was one key to my survival. On a lifeboat, even on a raft, there’s always something that needs doing” (Martel 190). Every human needs something going on in their head because if not, they would be dead. Pi acknowledges that and creates a schedule for himself to keep him busy and sane. This goes along with the sense of purpose and not giving up on what he set himself to…
While he was in the lifeboat, he used praying for a couple of things. He used it to pass the time, but it also was used by him to keep his faith restored, and help him get through this really rough time in his life. He often prayed whenever something would go wrong, but at the same time he would just pray to pass some time, and talk to god. The last thing that occurred on the lifeboat that could have affected his mindset is his realization that his family was really gone. He started to understand this heart-wrenching fact in chapter 49, when he starts to decide to look through the rations of the lifeboat. His realization that they are dead causes him to have a decrease in hope of being found and he kicks into survival mode and doesn’t focus on being found but just staying alive. Pi was on the lifeboat for a very long time. 227 days to be exact. In that amount of time, many people tend to lose their sense of communication with others. It is typically highly unlikely that people can just come back into the normal world. However, when Pi returned, he was fully functioning, and was able to come back and do interviews, and later have a wife, children, and pets. That is pretty amazing when you think about it. Lastly, Pi is seen as the protagonist in the entire duration of the story That can prove that he had great determination and will to live because he came out a hero. He did a lot of really great things whilst on the…
Can the upbringing of a person distinguish one from the society one lives in? In Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, John faces isolation in both societies that he belongs to. Linda, Shakespeare, and the Malpais religion create a discrepancy between the New World and the Reservation leaving John as an outsider from both.…
The experience of isolation has a profound effect on the psychological health of an individual. The first type of isolation, forced isolation, is the least detrimental because a higher command has ordered the isolation and it cannot be changed. Not fitting into the social landscape or norm, and therefore becoming ostracized leads to social isolation, or the second type of isolation. Lastly, self-inflicted isolation is perhaps the most severe because internal psychological factors contribute to it, making it harder to overcome, and, therefore, the most harmful. In Golding’s Lord of the Flies, Kesey’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, and Huxley’s Brave New World, each of the types of…
Pi is trapped at sea, no way home, all alone, with no family. “The endings are the same as every other, we’re only here to die”. Like the rest of his family, he thinks he will die as well at first before he gains all of his hope.…
Steinbeck conveys that isolation, voluntary or not, can be experienced even when one is around many people. He shows isolation through his use of characterization. The author portrays voluntary isolation with Curley's wife and her husband. "You can talk to people, but I can’t talk to nobody but Curley. Else he gets mad.” (Steinbeck 84). Steinbeck also portrays involuntary isolation by creating Curley as a overprotective husband who disapproves of her talking to other men. By making Curly’s character with this personality it involuntarily creates a sense of isolation for Curley's wife because the working men do not like being around her because she is a flirt and they do not want to get in trouble from Curley in result making no-one want…
Despite the fact that he faced many struggles throughout the novel (majorly part 2), he managed to remain optimistic and determined to find a way to escape. In most cases, a person would have just given up under the circumstances he fell under, but Pi had faith in getting off the ship and finding land. He never gave up despite the fact that he knew that he'd never see his family again, and he had to survive for 227 days with a ferocious tiger, and little food. The odds against his survival were prominently against his favor, but that didn't stop him. He had to overcome his fear of killing animals in his struggle for survival. Pi went from hesitating to kill a fish, to becoming comparable to a professional fisherman. Although there were many thoughts going through his head to just jump off the boat and put an end to everything, his perseverance overcame his doubt and he did anything possible to…
The negative forces that practically drown out the boys’ good intentions and extract the boys from living in a fulfilling life as a child in society within Lord of the Flies by the author William Golding seems to always be discussed first rather than talk about what little but meaningful the good forces are that remain on the island. For example, Jack Merridew and his tribe’s savagery is regardless of where you find source from, rather it be your teacher or a website like Sparknotes is usually saying the same things, but in different wording each time. He’s the aspect of instinct, he became power hungry and became a force of evil, or had been from the very start, even that he bullies Piggy to make himself feel stronger knowing he has a cluster of pre-teen boys laughing behind him. But it seems that in the notes, nobody discusses how important Piggy actually is. Although Piggy seemed to be a nuisance, he was the primary symbol of realism within a society.…
Life of Pi, a novel written by Canadian author Yann Martel, is the incredible story of how 16-year old teenager Pi Patel survives 227 days trapped in a lifeboat with only a large 450-pound Bengal tiger for company. During his 7-month ordeal over the vast Pacific ocean, misery, hunger, and desperation threaten to blot out his existence, but with the help of his worst enemy and God, he pushes on. As he is forced to adapt to his new environment to survive, Pi finds himself forced into a harsh world where the best of the best survive.…