Preview

Shaving by George Leslie Norris

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1066 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Shaving by George Leslie Norris
Shaving by George Leslie Norris pg. 323
1. How are father and son alike? The father and son were alike because they were both responsible and family came first. They were both men.
How are they different? They were different because Barry was strong and athletic and the father was frail and sick.
“his father’s throat was fleshless and vulnerable” shows the father’s utter dependence on Barry, and the fact that his life virtually lies in his son’s hands
Barry’s size and strength shows that he has made the physical change from boyhood to manhood, while the shaving of his father itself shows that he is still making the mental and emotional transition into manhood.
Describe the relationship between father and son. How do they feel about each other? How do you know? Barry loved his father enough to want to come home to him instead of going out with his friends. His father was a man who always had to have things just right. As soon as he realized that his son was able to take his place he loved him and trusted him enough to die, knowing his wife and son would be in good hands.
Of what significance is Barry’s athletic prowess? He is becoming a man.
How does it help reveal his character? In the beginning of the story it talked about him being small “a few years back” and at the end of the story it talked of his “small” hands “not very long ago”. Barry was shown as growing from a small boy to man in several places in this story. Barry’s athletic prowess was significant because this shows he is maturing into a man that can accept his father’s death and the responsibility to take over as the man of the house, also, when his father realized how strong he was he and asked about his son’s age. He recognized that his son had the strength to take over as man of the house.
2. Why is the shaving equipment described in such detail? Shaving is a ritual. Barry’s father liked things just right. Barry methodically cleaned every piece of shaving equipment showing love

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    In “Shaving” Leslie Norris portrays that Barry is ready to become the leader of the family through direct characterization. Barry is mature and strong, yet his father is weak and now has to rely on Barry for everything. Norris begins implementing this message by describing Barry as how “He walked solidly now and often alone. He was tall, strongly made; his hands and feet were adult and heavy. The room in which all his life he’d grown had become to small for him” (Norris 1). This promotes the idea that Barry is not just mentally but physically ready to become patriarch of the family. He has grown up and is able to function without depending on someone such as his father. As the story progresses the reader then gets characteristics of “His father’s face was fine-skin and pallid carried a dark stubble of beard” (Norris 2) that needed to be shaved. The reader can infer that Barry’s father is weak and he is ready to let Barry take over his position in the family. This is justified when Barry’s father lets him shave his face. His father is letting go of himself and is relying on Barry to pick up where he is leaving off.…

    • 887 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Children need attention, affection, and stability. These are necessities that Barry discovered through her teacher in Room 2. I found these necessities in the arms of my grandmother, whether she have been scolding me for misbehaving in Sunday School or gently guiding my hand with hers as we turned the crank on her once white, but then yellowed and faded, apple printed sifter. These were the times that I could count on to be listened to by an adult. These were the times when I began to realize that I could be more than the burden that I felt that I was in my own…

    • 495 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    1. What do you think is the most important similarity and which is the most important difference? Use specifics to support your answer.…

    • 508 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    White's Childhood Lake

    • 763 Words
    • 4 Pages

    He felt like his father because with his son he remembers doing the same things that his father did when he was younger, and he felt like his son because his son was doing some of the same things he had done with his father when he was a boy.…

    • 763 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    He would be able to be a teenage boy once again. “Instead I went upstairs and took out the electric razor Annie had given me for Christmas and shaved off my moustache.” You could tell that this action was surprisingly hard for him and took a lot of strength. Even from…

    • 861 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Pact

    • 1832 Words
    • 8 Pages

    3. Describe George’s step and biological fathers. How were they alike? How were they different.…

    • 1832 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Johnny Got His Gun

    • 466 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The relationship between Joe and his father was conveyed through precise details in the story, such as the isolated campsite “covered with pine trees and dotted with lakes”. This “nine thousand feet high” campsite was more than a vacation spot; it was a tradition - created by father and son, and bonded by time. It emphasized Joe relationship with his father as each summer, “ever since he was seven”, they came to this place. This perfectly conveys Joe and his father’s close relationship, as they preferred each other’s company than that of other people. Their many years together bonded their relationship, and it furthermore stresses the difficulty of the situation he knew “had to happen”, when Joe has to tell his father that he preferred to go fishing with Bill Harper instead.…

    • 466 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The author Alfonso Lacayo transports us to his experience in the summer of fourth grade, he had everything he needed for school, books, clothes, shoes, except one thing, a haircut. Similar to most children in fourth grade he was not worried about the condition of his hair. Saying he never brushed it or took care of it, which how many fourth graders felt about their hair. The author used humor to make the audience relate to his story, he drew people in with funny aspects. Repetition was used to show how bad his hair really was when he said multiple people told him he needed a haircut. The use of those techniques make Lacayo and his story relatable to many people.…

    • 696 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    the pact

    • 1835 Words
    • 21 Pages

    3. Describe George’s step and biological fathers. How were they alike? How were they different.…

    • 1835 Words
    • 21 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Moving on from the mothers’ personalities and where they stand in society, the mothers have many similarities. They are both mothers. They both have more than one child. They are compared to having an inner conflict. They have responsibilities taking care of their children. The mothers may have many similarities, although what make them different are their inner conflicts.…

    • 465 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    On the Waterfront

    • 1202 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Edie Doyle and Father Barry epitomise individual conscience, which Kazan attributes to how they are outsiders and allows this value to waver as both of them become more involved with actions of disruption and protest against the corrupt union on the waterfront. Father Barry was a “saint [who] hid in the church” believing that “time and faith were great healers”. It was Edie’s sense of justice which pushed Father Barry out of his passive role to work for social justice, as she bitingly scorned Father Barry’s inability with a close up used so that viewers can tangibly feel her resentment, when Joey had just been pushed off the roof of the tenement. Father Barry had transformed from being a “potato eater” (demeaning label of an Irish Catholic simpleton), to risk being “shipped off to Abyssinia” (a pun perhaps as the abyss is death) to break the mob’s corrupt grip on the waterfront. The attack on the church did not faze Father Barry despite the alarming clatter of baseball bats on the pavement and heads being…

    • 1202 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The poem I found to be the most stimulating was Barberism by Terrance Hayes. Within this excerpt, Hayes is open-minded to every diminutive aspect, which surrounds him before he receives a haircut from the barber. For example, “It was light and somehow luckless, the hair I cut from the head of my father-in-law it was pepper-blanched and wind-scuffed…Of my clippers like a dark language, the static covering his mind stuck to my fingers. It mingled in halfhearted tufts with the dust”. Here, Hayes is providing the reader an open-minded and descriptive perspective from his point of view as he deeply describes where his own hair originated from, therefore emphasizing how he values his hair. Plus, he also describes the texture and hue of his hair before…

    • 315 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Barry believes that relationships require lots of effort. This is illustrated by his repeated attempts to please his wife. Although he was very unsuccessful in these attempts and only gave a small effort in some of his actions, he clearly wished to keep their relationship. He included this value to show to even though men and women have many differences, it is important to work through them. This ties into his purpose because it tells the idea of differences in genders even further. The author’s use of imagery when explaining the "lack of filth" (Barry 2) in his house showed how different things looked from his…

    • 436 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Forbidden City Quote Chart

    • 1264 Words
    • 6 Pages

    -Dad’s “shoulders and head shook from the deep sobs that came from down inside him” “I realized how badly hurt he was, as badly as me” (Bell, 12)…

    • 1264 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    I Spy

    • 827 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Greene further establishes the similarity between father and son by making them “both do things in the dark that frighten them”. Also Greene specifically outlines the point that the pair are similar when he writes “...his father was very much like himself...”.…

    • 827 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics