I. Maturity
A. Henry “the youth”
B. Homesickness
C. War epiphany
II. Self Preservation
A. Running Away
B. Personification of gunshots
C. Regret
III. Isolation
A. Young and inexperienced
B. Comfort in nature
C. “Red Badge of Courage”
IV. Bravery
A. Becomes a hero
B. Flag Bearer
C. Has Epiphany
This war novel, The Red Badge of Courage, is about the growth of a young man, Henry Fleming, in the civil war; his physical and psychological growth. As a young and inexperienced enlister, it did not take long for Henry to realize the true horrors of war. The author, Stephen Crane, provides an intense realism in his story. He undergoes a complete transformation throughout the book. What happens to most people in a lifetime happens to Henry Fleming over the course of a few weeks. Major concepts that Crane uses in this novel to show Henry’s transformation was maturity, self preservation, isolation, and bravery.
Maturing is a natural part of the human experience; when a person develops understanding, responsibility, and wisdom. This is a the central theme in the Stephen Cranes war novel The Red Badge of Courage, all major concepts in this book can be connected back to maturity. Young and naïve, Henry enlists in the war with an ignorant view of what war is really like. He is blind to the truth of war, he only knows of what he has read about in books and has learned at school. The