He Sleep Curled Up Like A Pill Bug Analysis

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“Just as Orhan did, he slept curled up like a pill bug” (Pamuk 291) While Black should be the hero of this novel, he is actually one of the weakest characters that the reader encounters. He constantly whines and acts childish and incapable of most things. Here, Pamuk decides to show the extent of Black’s weakness by describing how he sleeps. Obviously, writers get to choose every aspect of their characters. This includes their personality, physical traits, and even how they sleep. Pamuk could have chosen to compare Black’s sleeping position to something that readers associate with strength. However, he chooses to compare Black to a pill bug, one of the weakest animals on the planet. In the world, bugs are what people walk all over and crush …show more content…

She constantly speaks down to Black and makes him feel like a stranger instead of her husband. The reader never really sees the extent of how Shekure’s words affect Black. It is obvious that those words would hurt for she questions everything that Black does even if he is just trying to comfort her while she grieves. Here, Pamuk lets the reader in on how much Shekure’s words hurt Black. In this scene, she tells Black that she only married him because she felt obligated. She has shown hints of her questioning their marriage before that have driven Black mad but, now she directly tells him that, in her eyes, their marriage is obligatory. Black listens to her words raptly and begins to feel their effect on him. While Shekure is not brash with her words, they still have a strong hold on Black because of how elated the notions of Shekure’s love made him. When Pamuk compares Shekure’s words to nails he shows how those words affect Black with a comparison to a something that people associate with pain. Authors use similes to accentuate points they want to make in their writing. This simile, in particular, allows the reader to feel Black’s pain on a more intense level for they are now able to compare his emotional pain to the physical pain that a nail brings. “Like an eagle gliding elegantly over a tract of land, his eye, which he maintained at a constant distance from the lens, passed ever so slowly over the three marvelous horse …show more content…

However, Christians also believe that Satan is another being that exists that is out to turn them away from God. In this section of My Name is Red the reader gets a chance to read from the perspective of Satan. It is interesting to read this and compare Pamuk’s writing of Satan and the experiences that Satan experiences in his chapter to the Satan that I believe in as a Christian. The Satan that Christians believe in is a hubris being that was cast from Heaven because he defied God and convinced man to turn away from him. Pamuk does a fantastic job of capturing the pure pride that Satan would most likely show if man could talk with him face to face. Pamuk even shows that this pride “caused [Satan] to fall out with the Almighty in the first place” (Pamuk 289). Satan’s pride and his need for power is what caused him to deceive Adam and Eve and eventually get him cast out of Heaven. The Satan chapter, in general, sent shivers down my spine because of how much it reflected the Christian belief system. Pamuk speaks of Satan’s deceit, how he was cast out of Heaven, and the conflicts he had with God. Overall, it was impressive how accurate Pamuk was when capturing the emotions that Satan could have been feeling in the scenes that Christians grow up hearing and reading

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