Preview

Who Is Krakauer's Bias In Into The Wild

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
713 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Who Is Krakauer's Bias In Into The Wild
Bias of Jon Krakauer The book Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer is about a young man named Chris “Alex Supertramp” McCandless, who goes into the Alaskan wilderness, some say unprepared, and dies. In this story Krakauer includes opinions of others like how they did not exactly think highly of Chris or how they thought he was brave, but he also has his own bias on Chris McCandless. Like every other opinion, there is a reason behind why Krakauer felt the way he did toward Chris. His reason is because he feels he can relate to Chris. Seeing as how they have been through several similar experiences, Krakauer has in a sense a “weak spot” for him. He didn't believe Chris was ignorant, but was just trying to find his own person. He admired his determination …show more content…
“I was haunted by the particulars of the boys starvation and by vague, unsettling parallels between events in his life and those in my own.” (Krakauer). This quote helped make it obvious that this was Krakauer’s reason as to why he thought so fondly of Chris. His bias was on a personal level. Chris and his father did not have a great relationship mainly because he found out about a lie his father had been keeping. Krakauer too realized that his father, a man that seemed to think himself to be perfect, also had flaws. So when analyzing Chris’s life, Krakauer was able to relate to Chris because of the fact they were both driven away by the imperfection of their fathers. Krakauer states, “But I believe we were similarly affected by the skewed relationships we had with our fathers” (Krakauer 155), relating himself to McCandless’s situation and because of this he goes on to say, “And I suspect we had a similar intensity, a similar heedlessness, a similar agitation of the soul”(Krakauer 155), furthermore comparing himself to Chris. He even adds his own experience of his “call of the wild”, it seems, to give the reader insight on Alex McCandless’s ways and this insight could have played a role in misdirecting a readers opinion of

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    In Chapter 6, Krakauer describes McCandless’s relationship with a U.S. Veteran named Ronald Franz. While Franz is fighting in the Vietnam War, his wife and son are killed in a tragic car accident and Franz turns to alcohol. However, he quits drinking and manages to turn his life around. While living in Salton Sea, CA, Franz picks up a hitchhiker who turns out to be Chris. Chris has set up camp on the edge of the Anza-Borrego Desert State Park and Franz is living in an apartment complex that he manages.…

    • 196 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the book Into the Wild it explains a true story that had changed the the lives of many. A young man who all he wanted was to escape society and get away from the world. His life did end shortly after his disappearance. But that does not mean he did not live his life to the fullest. Jon Krakauer the author of the book Into the Wild describes Chris McCandless faults and traits. Chris is an intelligent guy but he finds a new meaning for life and wants to go discover it. He didn't have any contact with his parents but was contacting his sister carrie. Krakauer does a tremendous job of interviewing everyone who had anything to do with McCandless from his parents, when he grew up, to the people who found his body in the abandoned bus in Alaska.…

    • 286 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In 1992 a man began his four month journey of leaving everything behind, college, family, and all his relationships to start a completely new life in the wild. In the book The Wild by Jon Krakauer, Chris McCandless recreates a new life for himself. while following his long journey, Chris renamed himself Alexander Supertramp and met many people along the way like Gallion, Franz, and Westerberg. Although some people think that Chris’s death has purpose, really Chris died in vain, alone in the woods.Chris proves this when he risks his life countless times and gets repeatedly questioned for it by friends along his trip. Chris wasted his time in the woods and could have lived if he listened to the people around him who were trying to help him.…

    • 761 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The book “Into the Wild” by Jon Krakauer talks about an adventurous young man that travels into the Alaskan wilderness pursuing the right lifestyle for himself. Chris McCandless was a modern day nomad from the 20th century looking for a way to live a free life. Chris found out that his father never divorced his first wife causing an impact on his life that helps with his decision to live a nomadic life. Chris is very intelligent young man but at the same time an arrogant one too who has taken on a path to travel to the Alaska and live the free life that he desires.…

    • 780 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    I think that Chris McCandless was bright and ignorant at the same time. He had no common sense, and he had no business going into Alaska with his romantic silliness. He made a lot of mistakes based on arrogance. I dont admire him at all for his courage nor his noble ideas. Really, I think he was just plain crazy. Shaun Callarman Explain Callarmans argument and discuss the extent to which you agree or disagree with his analysis. 4. Beyond simply not getting along with his father, do you relate to Chris Do you feel that you understand him and what he did Do you admire him for his goals Have you had any experiences that you think help you better understand him 5. Krakauer says in the Authors Note that there were many differing opinions about Chris, and that his own convictions should be apparent soon enough. But that he will leave it to the reader to form his or her own opinion of Chris…

    • 684 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Chris McCandless was a person who every parent would dream of having. He majored in many subjects and graduated with his high honors, but you wouldn't think expect his next step after graduation. In April of 1992, he packed up his bags, abandoned everything he had, and gave the rest of his savings to charity, to go on a journey to Mt. McKinley to start his new life. The story, “Into the Wild” was powerful how Jon Krakauer style of writing made Chris McCandless’s Adventures seem real and even pop out of books to the readers. Krakauer uses many stylistic devices/techniques in order to reveal his tone about Chris McCandless.…

    • 680 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Since the author decided not to tell the story in chronological order, he is able to give the reader more in depth knowledge about the decision Chris made and other people similar to him, with similar thought process. In Chapter 9, Krakauer shifts the book in a new direction of another young man by the name of Everett Ruess. Ruess was a 20 year old boy, who traveled to a place known as Davis Gulch. Ruess and McCandless both had their opportunity to go to an Ivy league school, for both that wasn’t their desire to go to school, get and education, and shortly after find a well paying job. They wanted to go out into the world on their own and see what life has in store for them. “He dropped out after a single semester (UCLA), to his father’s lasting dismay.”(90) Krakauer shows the first similarity between the boys and how they both had fathers who wanted them to live by their fathers standards and do what they chose for them. After both failed to follow direction from their parents they received nothing but shame. This was a turning point for them and would be the start of their new beginning. Another similarity they both had was at the end of their journey they faced a life or death situation and they made a small mistake costing them their lives. Suffering from starvation, Ruess had a case of poison ivy and wrote to his friend Bill Jacobs “ For two days i couldn’t tell whether I was dead or alive…” (93) McCandless using his book about plants, looked up a berry plant and found it was edible shortly after eating the berries he came to find out that it was poisonous and would eventually kill him. Adopting new names for themselves that described how they see themselves. For Ruess, the name “Nemo- Latin for nobody…”, he wrote this name last found into sandstone…

    • 1472 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout the tragic novel Into the Wild, author Jon Krakauer provides an in depth analysis of the life and lonely death of Christopher McCandless. McCandless was a young man straight out of college, looking to find himself while hitchhiking alone in the bush of Alaska. Unfortunately for Chris his well anticipated venture turned fatal after a hundred some days alone in the wilderness. Jon Krakauer uses rhetorical methods for the duration of the book, which allows him to speak of Chris’s life with a sense of certainty. The reader thus trusts Krakauer’s narrative and somewhat understands why a man like Chris could head into unknown territory without a second thought. The author shows his qualification for writing about Chris by making comparisons with his own life and interviewing those close to Chris…

    • 936 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The McCandless family suffered from many problems; such as the father’s infidelity and abusive nature. An author Chris admired, Leo Tolstoy, once wrote, “I wanted movement and not a calm course of existence. I wanted excitement and danger… I felt in myself a superabundance of energy which found no outlet in our quiet life” (Krakauer 15). McCandless had highlighted this passage in a book that was found with his remains. Tolstoy speaks of his need for a life different from…

    • 720 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    During their journeys against the wilderness, Henry David Thoreau and Jon Krakauer challenged the demands and territories between the humans’ safe haven and Mother Earth’s true land. Both Walden and Into The Wild share themes that both authors address.…

    • 393 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout chapter three, Krakauer touches on how Chris had a relatively normal, cookie cutter childhood, stating “In truth McCandless had been raised in the comfortable upper-middle-class environs of Annandale, Virginia” (19). McCandless, being a successful graduate with “a history and anthropology major with a 3.72 grade-point average,” (20) had a list of endless opportunities he could pursue. But, the ‘American dream’ seemed a little too conforming to McCandless, so he decided after graduating to leave for Alaska. After his graduation, “his exact words were ‘I think I’m going to disappear for awhile.’” before he departed on his trip to the Alaskan Odyssey. Pulling on the heartstrings of the audience, Krakauer uses McCandless’ lack of conscious and the worry of his parents to appeal to…

    • 586 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Chris Mccandless Crazy

    • 797 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Into the wild is a book and a movie written by Jon Krakauer that is inspired by the actions of a college graduate named Chris McCandless. He lived a life on his own and was not the average person. Many people have different views and opinions about him and the way he chose to live his life. Shaun Callarman claims that he, “was bright and ignorant at the same time. He had no common sense, and he had no business going into Alaska with his Romantic silliness. He made a lot of mistakes based on ignorance. I don't admire him at all for his courage nor his noble ideas. Really i think he was plain crazy,” I strongly agree with Callarman’s statement because he did not consider the consequences of his actions before doing them.…

    • 797 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Chris Mccandless

    • 810 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Chris McCandless is a person who did not believe in rules of society. He believed that he was above rules. He even felt he could defeat nature; he went into the wild expecting to come out alive while he lived on what nature gave him. “Alaska has long been a magnet for dreamers and misfits, people who think the unsullied enormity of the Last Frontier will patch all the holes in their lives” (Krakauer, 6). This is exactly what Chris was trying to do when he went into the Alaskan wilderness. He wanted to escape the rules and suffering he faced in society. He “ESCAPED FROM ATLANTA.” (Krakauer, 112), he did not want to stay there because he wanted to escape his parents and his false life. His goal was to go to Alaska and live there because he read of the beauty of the wilderness in Jack London stories. He traveled west and lived as a tramp, “AND NOW AFTER TWO RAMBLING YEARS COMES THE FINAL AND GREATEST ADVENTURE” (Krakaur, 112). This great adventure he was about to take is the adventure of living in the wilderness of Alaska with the skills he had and what he could carry on his back. Jim Gallien recalled, “He wasn’t carrying anywhere near as much food and gear as you’d expect a guy to be carrying for that kind of trip” (Krakauer, 5). The man in “To Build a Fire” went to go meet his friends in the cold with nothing to protect him or keep him warm except the clothes on his back, and a dog that…

    • 810 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The preceding quote demonstrates an example of how Chris and his father were very different from each other. He wrote, “‘I'm going to divorce them as my parents once and for all and never speak to either of those idiots again as long as I live’” (Krakauer 64). This is a prime example of the consequences when Chris challenged societal expectations and it is also a prime example of how he was misjudged by his family. The consequence of defying society is that he was smart and people judged him because they might have been jealous of his intelligence. Chris himself even knew his level of intelligence. They might have judged him because he was smart but they did not realize the struggles he undertook with his family. He was judged by his family because they did not realize his level of intelligence. They judged him because they were not able to comprehend his intelligence and they did not understand his thinking process. He felt that he was too intelligent for the rest of society and he felt like he needed to leave everything and go off on his own living for himself. This makes complete sense and it is honestly a very smart decision he made. He knew there was going to be consequences along the way, but he did not care. He was living for himself and himself only.…

    • 913 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    (E. O. Wilson). In the novel, Into the Wild author Jon Krakauer not only examines Chris McCandless’ life and his actions but also shares his own past actions and how they relate to Chris, bringing light to why Chris did what he did. Every person needs to find their own key to satisfaction, McCandless’s happened to be the transcendentalist beliefs of nature being the only substance required for happiness. Jon Krakauer supports the dependence upon nature by explaining why someone would take radical actions, like McCandless, to experience the life written about by some of the world’s most famous transcendentalist writers. As Krakauer shares in the…

    • 333 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays