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Tag: Themes

Redemption by John Gardner – Themes

Posted on January 22, 2021January 22, 2021 by JL Admin

God and Religion  Gardner chooses God and religion as one of his central themes in “Redemption.” More specifically, Gardner chooses to explore theodicy, the defense of God’s omnipotence and goodness in the face of evil. The central question of theodicy is, of course, if God is good and all-powerful, why does God allow evil in…

A New England Nun – Themes

Posted on January 19, 2021January 19, 2021 by JL Admin

Choices and Consequences  One important theme in Mary Wilkins Freeman’s “A New England Nun” is that of the consequences of choice. Louisa is faced with a choice between a solitary and somewhat sterile life of her own making and the life of a married woman. She has waited fourteen years for Joe Dagget to return…

Mrs. Bathurst by Rudyard Kipling – Themes

Posted on January 15, 2021January 15, 2021 by JL Admin

Art and Experience  “Mrs. Bathurst” explores, among other things, the relationship between experience and its artistic representation through language. The central story of the tale is told second-hand, by Mr. Pyecroft, with help from Sergeant Pritchard. Readers must evaluate the relative positions of all of the narrators in the story in order to understand that…

Mateo Falcone – Themes

Posted on January 7, 2021January 7, 2021 by JL Admin

Culture Clash  “Mateo Falcone” concerns the cultural clash between savagery and civilization. The French, in particular, developed these themes, beginning with the work of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, whose Essay on the Origin of Inequality Among Men (1854) presented the notion that primitive people were uniquely free and true to themselves in their existence, while civilized people,…

The Masque of the Red Death – Themes

Posted on January 3, 2021January 3, 2021 by JL Admin

Death  While this story is literally about a pestilence called the Red Death, it can be read at an allegorical level as a tale about man’s fear of his own mortality. In the story, Prince Prospero and his “thousand friends” seal themselves into an abbey of his castle in an attempt to “defy contagion” and…

The Man to Send Rain Clouds – Themes

Posted on December 31, 2020December 31, 2020 by JL Admin

Creativity  In her short story “The Man to Send Rain Clouds,” Silko perceives creativity as a source of strength for Native Americans, a theme that recurs in her later works. In particular, Leon’s strength lies in his ability to creatively combine Indian rituals with Catholic rituals. He does not strictly follow the Indian ways, but…

The Magic Barrel – Themes

Posted on December 27, 2020December 27, 2020 by JL Admin

Identity  Malamud’s Leo Finkle is a character trying to figure out who he really is. Having spent the last six years of his life deep in study for ordination as a rabbi, he is an isolated and passionless man, disconnected from human emotion. When Lily Hirschorn asks him how he came to discover his calling…

The Lifted Veil – Themes

Posted on December 25, 2020December 25, 2020 by JL Admin

Science versus the supernatural  “The Lifted Veil,” like many Gothic tales, interrogates the boundaries between scientific knowledge and the supernatural, between the rational and the irrational. This set of dichotomies is laid out in the differences between Latimer and his friend Meunier. Latimer describes their childhood friendship as an attraction of opposites, a meeting of…

The Legend of Sleepy Hollow – Themes

Posted on December 20, 2020December 20, 2020 by JL Admin

City versus Country  One of the great themes of American literature and American folklore is the clash between the city and the country, between civilization and the wilderness. As the theme is played out in literature around the world, it carries one of two interpretations: either the city is seen as beautiful, civilized, rich, clean…

In Another Country – Themes

Posted on December 17, 2020December 17, 2020 by JL Admin

“In the fall the war was always there, but we did not go to it anymore.” So begins Ernest Hemingway’s short story, “In Another Country.” The war he refers to is World War I; the setting is Milan, away from the scene of the fighting. The narrator is a young American man who is in…

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