High school students across the world hate Gene, the character that they are forced to read about, in a book they didn’t want to read. Gene is generally thought of as the despicable human being that ruined his friend’s life. It is easy to write Gene off as a one dimensional character who is only concerned about himself. This common misconception is proved to be false after a deeper analysis of Gene’s character. Gene’s character is more complex than his exterior actions portray. In reality, Gene’s inner “evil” represents a part of human nature, which most people are unwilling to look at in themselves. Gene’s actions throughout the book should not be written off only because Gene is a terrible person. The motivation for Gene’s actions might not …show more content…
Knowles uses Gene to represent humanity as a whole. A flawed, but reconcilable species. The moral reconciliation that Gene goes through in the book, is a necessary psychological progression towards finding peace within himself.
A Separate Peace portrays Phineas as a christ like figure in contrast to Gene, who represents the imperfectness of humanity 's moral condition. The contrast between Phineas and Gene is portrayed in a Judeo- Christian manner, which characterizing Phineas as Christ like savior, and Gene as the human world. Knowles’ book continues to draw on Roman Catholicism in the characterization of the protagonists. ”Phineas still asleep on the dune, made me think of Lazarus, brought back to life by the touch of God”[ Knowles 41].Phineas is portrayed as beyond human, someone better than any regular person could hope to be. Gene antagonistically, is shown as a selfish, loathing, and isolated. Phineas is always supportive of his friend, never wishing him any type of harm. Gene is a chronic cynic, distrustful of his best friend’s motivations and desires. “I had detected that Finny’s[heart] was a den of lonely selfish ambition. He was no better than I…”[48].
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Although, A Separate Peace does not recount Gene’s life after the death of Phineas, there are very clear descriptions of how his moral reckoning with Phineas helped him develop as a person. “I never developed an intense hatred of the enemy [in the war] … I was on active duty all my time at school; I killed my enemy there” [196]. In any person’s development there needs to be growth. Gene’s realization his inner demons allow him to progress past subordinate stages of development to live his life. Gene exists in a state of cognitive dissonance. His existence is compromised by the difference between his thoughts and actions. There is an inner conflict within Gene, between his liking of his friend and his inner predispositions. Gene lives in an almost psychopathic state, living a flawed existence. Instead of fully establishing his identity and personhood, he exists as separate from his identity, trying to live without knowing existence. This leads to many strange scenarios where he can’t distinguish his own identity from Phineas’. “A soaring sense of freedom revealed that this must be my purpose from the first: to become part of Phineas” [77]. Only through realizing, his inner thoughts, can Gene truly establish himself as a person. Until then, he is drifting in an in-between phase, confused and derelict.
In the novel A Separate Peace, by John Knowles, Gene and Finny have boarding school experiences during World War II. Finny helps Gene mature throughout the story. Finny is an archetypal Jesus because of he preaches his ideas to his peers, his death is similar to Jesus’s, and his charismatic personality.
Have you ever read a book where one of the main characters was so envious of another? Well, here you have it. In John Knowles “A Separate Peace”, Gene is all for the jealous rage and resentful ways. Throughout the book, Mr. Knowles places the boys in a boarding school and sets the tale so that the reader knows all the focus is set upon Finny and Gene’s relationship. Speaking of relationships and Gene’s way, the storyline takes a turn and Finny actually ends up being almost physically pushed out of a tree. I say that shows a large characteristic of Gene. He is without a doubt, resentful towards Finny.
At the Devon School, the climate of war creates an even greater impedance in the way of Gene and Phineas’ development, as now both characters must attempt to understand death. For Gene at such a young age, death has never been a part of his life until Phineas dies. Phineas has always been fated to die, but Gene is not able to comprehend this until Finny falls down the marble stairs at the First Academy Building. On revisiting the marble stairs, Gene recognizes their “exceptional hardness” (Knowles 11). The hardness that Gene speaks of is representative of the hardness of coping with war and death during such a crucial developmental time. This imagery is utilized by Knowles in A Separate Peace to define that until Gene recognizes the incomprehensible nature of war and death, he will never escape the liminal state. By watching Phineas fall down the marble stairs, Gene is enlightened to the fact that war is real, death cannot be avoided, and both can never be
Gene is much like Cain and because he is like Cain he has jealousy and hatred against Phineas who is Abel. When Gene wakes up at sunrise on the beach, while Finny is still sleeping. Gene realizes that he has an important exam and it will take him a long time to get back to Devon. He makes it back in time to Devon, but fails the
Throughout A Separate Peace, John Knowles effectively uses his characterization of Finny to teach one of life's greatest lessons. Although at times Gene and Finny appear to be enemies, the tests and challenges Finny presents to Gene actually cause him to blossom, making him a stronger person. Despite Finny's death, his wisdom, courage and actions live on in Gene. Gene learns that throughout life accomplishments that one works for and achieves will provide much more reward than those handed to a person. Many times, the greatest reward is finding one's true self and discovering his or her capabilities.
The literary analysis essay for A Separate Peace entitled Chapter 7: After the Fall notes that Gene’s brawl with Cliff Quackenbush occurs for two reasons: the first reason being that Gene was fighting to defend Finny, and the second reason being that Quackenbush is the antithesis of Finny. Cliff Quackenbush calls Gene a “maimed son-of-a-bitch”, since Gene holds a position on the team that is usually reserved for physically disabled students, and Gene reacts by hitting him in the face (Knowles, 79). At first, Gene remarks that he didn’t know why he reacted this way, then he says, “it was almost as though I were maimed. Then the realization that there was someone who was flashed over me”, referring to Finny (Knowles, 79). Quackenbush is “the adult world of punitive authority personified”, his voice mature, his convictions militaristic (Chapter, 76). Quackenbush reminds Gene of the adult world and all of the things that Finny and Devon protected him from, such as war.
In the novel A Separate Peace, by John Knowles, the narrator, Gene Forrester struggles to earn and preserve a separate peace. The story takes place in a remote boarding school named Devon, in New Hampshire. While Gene and Finny are in school, World War II is taking place. The author clearly explains an important story about the jealousy between Gene and his best friend, Phineas. Gene suspects that Finny is trying to sabotage his grades, and Gene allows his jealousy to control his actions. Therefore, Gene misinterprets their relationship by thinking that they shared enmity towards each other, and this caused Gene to enter a world of jealousy and hatred, which ultimately leads to Finny’s death. By examining this jealousy, John Knowles
In the novels A Separate Peace and The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time there are a number of themes. The books have so many similarities in them. All of the characters love and help each other get through things that are tough in their life. One of the problems that all of the characters face is being lost. This isn’t one of the themes that I chose, but I think it puts them together nicely. Most of the characters want to be put back on the right path in the story. By the end of the novels, they all achieved this goal. The three things that helped them do that were the friendships and sheltering that they had and the forgiveness they gave and received.
Gene is a well-educated, athletic individual. He takes his school work seriously and keeps to himself, meaning he doesn’t favor standing out or being in the spotlight. He is a follower, especially when it comes to his best friend, Phineas. Throughout the book, he often compares himself to Phineas and talks about how perfect Finny is.
This story, A Separate Peace, exhibits interesting main characters which establish the frequent struggles of personal identity in adolescence. Gene's story is set in a boarding school called Devon during World War II and "The War" which he speaks of, gives overcast and grim feelings for his classes' future like an impending doom they cannot escape. Finny is a rebellious, charming, and very athletic boy. His charisma comes from his ability to make up rules and ideas on the spot and being able to get out of any trouble, which is magnetic to the other boys at Devon. Most of the teachers admired Phineas because he was the poster boy of boys not yet affected by the war, as mentioned by Gene when he says, "But there was another reason.
Throughout the novel, A Separate Peace, the author John Knowles conveys many messages of symbolism. The symbolism can be found in an array of ways, ranging from internal war, to the theme of human aggression, and a variety of religious principles. The main characters, Gene and Phineas, and their story could be paralleled to the biblical story of Adam and Eve. The similarities can be seen in the way in which in both of the stories, everyone is living in perfect harmony and peace until something comes along to disrupt it. Also in how the main characters do something out of jealousy, greed, and selfishness; and in addition, how Finny's fall out of a tree relates to the “Fall of Mankind.”
The first time his inner enemy is shown in the novel, is when Gene believes that Finny is out to make him fail; “Finny had deliberately set out to wreck my studies” (53). Phineas persuades Gene to go surfing at the beach, play blitzball, and attend the summer session meetings to loosen him up and have fun, not to make him fail. Gene cannot realize that Finny is doing this for Gene’s benefit, because his inner enemy distorts friendship from evil and fear. Gene’s inner enemy causes a key turning point in this novel, Finny’s fall. Gene’s enemy takes over his mind and jounces the branch to hurt the “enemy,” Phineas. Though Finny is the one physically falling, Gene is metaphorically falling into a hole filled with all his sins, because his inner enemy, too, pushed him. This causes Gene to feel like a worthless ant for the rest of the novel. Many of the students at Devon have an inner enemy that makes them feel like an ant. Quackenbush is mean to anyone he thinks is inferior to him. Brinker resents his enemies. On the other hand, Leper faces his enemy, but then gives up. These students believe that their real enemy is literally the Germans, but truly it is themselves putting up walls and making them feel like miniscule ants. All except Phineas. Phineas is the only one towhich the quote doesn’t apply because he never, “constructed at infinite cost to
A Separate Peace is a coming of age novel in which Gene, the main character, revisits his high school and his traumatic teen years. When Gene was a teen-ager his best friend and roommate Phineas (Finny) was the star athlete of the school.
...s creation as a way of revenge and payback for all the distress he brought to the creature. The creature, beginning as the most innocent, is alienated by his creator and every individual who witnesses his presence. Finally, Victor isolates himself from his beloved ones in order to fulfill his ambitions. All these misfortunes are caused by the lack of moral decision making. Unfortunately, these decisions ruined the life of many people involved in Victor’s life. All these events are the proof of what people’s actions can result into when isolation is a major theme in one’s life.
“Holding firmly to the trunk, I took a step toward him, and then my knees bent and I jounced the limb. Finny, his balance gone, swung his head around to look at me for an instant with extreme interest, and then he tumbled sideways, broke through the little branches below and hit the bank with a sickening, unnatural thud, It was the first clumsy physical action I had ever seen him make. With unthinking sureness I moved out on the limb and jumped into the river, every trace of my fear forgotten.” (Knowles 59-60). Gene Forrester, one of the main characters in John Knowles' novel A Separate Peace, describes his best friend Phineas' fall from a “tremendous tree, an irate steely black steeple beside a river,”(Knowles 6) at their all boys boarding school, Devon. Gene is an introverted young boy who is very academically gifted. Finny, however, is an extremely extroverted childish young boy who is very athleticaly gifted. Finny's fall eventually leads to terrible things, such as death and guilt. Throughout the novel Knowles uses Phineas' fall from the tree to symbolize his loss of innocence, to show Gene's guilt, and to develop Phinea's death.