“Cranes” by Hwang sunwon is a life or death situation between childhood friends whose paths cross during the intense political conflict between North and South Korea. Throughout “Cranes” there is a theme of friendship and family is more important than obeying your duties during political affairs. It portrays the theme by showing memories and the importance of family and friends. When captured by his childhood friends Tokenea confesses the reason behind his staying in the North. He needed to stay with his ill father who was to weak and refused to leave their farm land and to stay with his wife. By not leaving Sangsam realizes the nobleness of his old friend. Later on in the story while walking through a field filled with cranes, Sangsam receive
One of the many factors that have contributed to the success of Australian poetry both locally and internationally is the insightful commentary or depiction of issues uniquely Australian or strongly applicable to Australia. Many Australian poets have been and are fascinated by the issues relevant to Australia. Many in fact nearly all of these poets have been influenced or have experienced the subject matter they are discussing. These poets range from Oodgeroo Noonuccal Aboriginal and women’s rights activist to Banjo Patterson describing life in the bush. Bruce Dawe is also one of these poets. His insightful representation of the dreary, depressing life of many stay at home mothers in “Up the Wall” is a brilliant example of a poem strongly relevant to Australia.
The Red Badge of Courage and The Blue Hotel: The Singular Love of Stephen Crane
This frustration acted as a vehicle for her to gain a desire to be more
Initially, Elisabeth is the matriarch of the four generations of women talked about in the story. Elisabeth works in the house, but she’s married to a field slave and has three daughters. Not much insight is given on Elisabeth and her feelings, yet through the narration it is as if she lived vicariously through her youngest daughter, Suzette: “It was as if her mother were the one who had just had her first communion not Suzette” (20) Even though Elisabeth too worked in the house, Suzette had more privileges than her mother and the other slaves. Elisabeth represented the strength and the pride of her people: “You have a mother and a father both, and they don’t live up to the [plantation] house” (25). She would constantly remind Suzette of her real family, which signifies the remembrance of a history of people and their roots. It is up to Suzette to keep the heritage even through the latter miscegenation of the generations to come.
The fundamental characteristic of magical realism is its duality, which enables the reader to experience both the character’s past and the present. In the novel, Monkey Beach, Eden Robinson uses this literary device to address the the trauma and mistreatment of the Haisla community in Canada by unveiling the intimate memories of the protagonist, Lisamarie, and the resulting consequences of this oppression. Monkey Beach illustrates how abuse in the past leads to another form of self-medication in the future - a neverending, vicious cycle for the members of the Haisla community. Many characters in Monkey Beach are scarred from childhood sexual abuse and family neglect, and resort to drug and alcohol abuse as a coping mechanism. These appalling memories are an account of the impact of colonization on the Haisla territory which continues to haunt the Aboriginal community throughout generations.
The two short stories, “The Princess of Nebraska” and “A Thousand Years of Good Prayers” by Yiyun Li, depict the lives of two people under Chinese communist control, trapped by the social restraints of their society in search of individual salvation. In “Princess of Nebraska”, a young girl (Sasha) struggles to find internal purpose and satisfaction within her life, feeling that the restraints of communist control keep her from achieving the sense of self she desires. She believes the United States is the solution to gaining her individual freedom and fantasizes the recreation of her identity and life. Similarly, “A Thousand Years of Good Prayers” revolves around the same theme of social freedom vs the discovery of the individual self. Mr.Shi,
Akunna on one of Mr. Brown's visits. " We also believe in Him and call
There is not many a time when men like Stephen Crane come by and take the whole world by surprise. His ideas are not popular for thinkers at the time but very realistic and down to earth. In his time, his short stories were not very prevalent but were read by many people. Stephen Crane found it very difficult to make money off of them and in that way, was inspired to write vigorously even to the point of his death. Stephen Crane craved the attention and support of the people and so gave birth to Naturalism literature. Interestingly, Stephen Crane found his own voice when he wrote The Red Badge of Courage at just twenty years old, and became very famous for the novel. This war novel was followed by a tremendous amount of short stories that had nature as a main theme. Stephen Crane felt nature all around him and felt that, even as a child Methodist, nature is an overwhelming force that should not be meddled with. Stephen Crane’s religious upbringing and life-changing experience led him to incorporate recurring themes of nature in his short stories as seen in The Open Boat.
The novel Upside Down, by Eduardo Galeano depicts the injustices and unfairness of several branches of the global society. The differences between the colonized and the colonizer as Galeano writes is always growing and so is the gap between rich and poor. The author challenges western and eurocentric minds as to why on average, countries in the northern hemisphere have a higher standard of living than countries in the southern hemisphere. At first as a reader I thought the writer was whining about the unfairness of the world, but it is the social opiates such as the false idea of capitalism and choice that keeps us in check in this so called democracy. The author forces the reader to open their hearts to a concept that today's capitalist, power hungry society has almost forgotten
Stephen Crane wrote two stories about war they are An Episode of War and The Red Badge of Courage. The novella The Red Badge of Courage can be read at many levels ranging from middle school to college level. Since these writings can be read at many different levels the language Crane uses has to be difficult, but understandable. The reader can tell how good the writer is by the level of reading and understanding that they can see the author is offering. For instance a reader in middle school may say that The Red Badge of Courage is just about war, but a person that is getting he or she's PHD they will see it in more depth than just war. Anyone can write a story, but only certain individuals
Stephen Crane was born in 1871 in the United States, New Jersey, home of many brothers and sisters , ranked fourth , parents were Methodists. At the age of 21 Stephen Crane published works , a minor celebrity at age 24 , died of tuberculosis at age 29 . In the nine years of his brief literary career, he published six novels, six collections of short stories , two poetry collection and a drama . His life was like a meteor rush across the American literary sky , fleeting, regrettable , but marvel. In 1891, Crane dropped out of college and went to work for a newspaper boy in New York. When ...
Unlike so much literature preceding Crane’s work, his writings insist “that we live in a universe of vast and indifferent natural forces, not in a world of divine providence or a certain moral order” (Vanouse). His second novella, Red Badge of Courage, did immensely better in the public reception. This story of a young war soldier became “renowned for its perceived authenticity and realistic depictions of violent conflict”, even though Crane had never been in military combat upon its publication (Stephen Crane Biography”). He simply created the vivid images expressed in his novella through extensive research. This work, published abridged in newspapers in 1894, is often likened to an Impressionistic painting due to “his episodic narrative structure and his consistent use of color imagery” while others argue that it is solely symbolic imagery (“Stephen Crane”). With either view, however, the work is a great tribute to the genre of naturalism as it studies “human beings governed by their instincts and passions” while applying the scientific principles of objectivity and detachment (Campbell). Crane, a founding father of naturalism, discovers “the extraordinary and excessiveness in human nature” through the tragedy of war
Crane’s poem has many themes, a main one happens to be about the battlefield. A few stanzas in the poem focus on what other soldiers see, experience, and deal with on a day-to-day basis. It also touches on the idea that some generals and higher positions had no problem sending soldiers into battle to die. Some of the scenes described in
What would happen if two brothers were pitted against one another in the civil war? “Cranes” by Hwang Sunwon, a short story, and “Thoughts of Hanoi”, a poem by Nguyen Thi Vinh both display how the war can impact one’s relationship with the other. The story “Cranes” focuses on two childhood friends that went to war. In the story, the author writes,” In front of the farmhouse that had been turned into a public peace-police office, a young man stood, tied up. He seemed to be a stranger, so Songsam approached him to have a close look. He was taken aback; it was none other than his boyhood playmate, Tokchae” (222). This excerpt shows that Songsam’s childhood friend is being kept captive, and both have fell in touch with each other. The author then writes,” ‘Hey, why don’t we stop here for a crane hunt?’ Songsam spoke up suddenly. Tockhae was
The story “Two Kinds” is based on a mother/daughter relationship told by the daughter in first person narrative. As seen through the daughter’s eyes the relationship is strained due to different views caused by a generation gap, different beliefs and cultures. The mother was born and raised in China and Ni Kan was raised in China town after her mother migrated to America in 1949. When her mother left China, she had to leave behind her parents, husband and twin daughters and through it all remained certain that America would provide her with opportunity’s that she didn’t have before. “But she never looked back with regret. There were so many ways for things to get better.” (pg. 821)