Analysis Of Into The Wild, By Jon Krakauer

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I chose the book Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer because it intrigued me with the controversy regarding this true story. Into the Wild is about young college educated man named Chris who decides to leave everything he has in society to go hitchhike across the United States. Specifically, he wants to be able to live off of the land in Alaska. Throughout his life, Chris was well loved by his family and friends, as well as by the people he met on his adventure. From an early age, he didn’t feel like he belonged in society. He struggled with this sense of integration. This is why he found solace in nature. Chris was always interested in outdoors as he frequently went on hiking trips and ran almost everyday. Although he complied with it for years, …show more content…

At this point in the story, Chris is on his way to Alaska when somebody asks him if he is prepared with supplies and all the correct paperwork. This shows the disrespect and unpreparedness he has for this adventure. He is just trying to get away from the authority in his, neglecting the dangerous outdoors he will face. The power of nature plays a big role in his life as he is constantly battling with it. “During the summer months, however, superheated air rises from the scorched earth like bubbles from the bottom of a boiling kettle"(Krakauer 14). This quote portrays the danger and power nature holds over humanity. It should be respected and yet Chris is blinded by his desire to go away from humanity, alone in nature. This book led me to my GRQ because it is all about his fight against nature alone. I started thinking about it when he several times refuses help from people on this journey. I connected it to the stereotypical men don't ask for directions argument. This got me wondering about the aspect of life that society used to deal with. The idea that the man provided for himself and his family. Historically, this was the idea that everybody …show more content…

By understanding his desire to leave society, a person can understand the reasoning why men feel they should be alone. The age of Chris combined with his ignorance found throughout the book is what fueled these three topic points surrounding the idea that men feel the desire to be alone. This GRQ is interesting to me because all of the values that society now holds is different than what Chris embodied. I want to understand why he would just go from everything he had and still be happy. Nobody now in the right mind would do this sort of thing as society has changed. Maybe Men do have this desire to earn their way or to do things alone which is what I want to uncover. We see it everyday where pride is a lot of who we are, whether it's as simple as not asking for directions or refusing some help. I always wondered why that might be, whether it's psychological or something else like evolution. This journey is a great way to try and understand the desire a man feels in his everyday life. Being a man as well, I can connect to what this guy feels he must do.The passion he feels is extraordinary. He doesn't like being trapped by the people around him, rather, he just wants to create his own destiny without the chains that smother

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