Graham Swift Short Story Symbolism

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The main character of the short story is never mentioned by name, but he is told to be married Jenny and the two of them have a son together named Doug. Their son served in Helmand in Afghanistan until he was killed and his body was thereafter moved to a mortuary in Swindon, a city in England. Doug’s sudden death changed the life of his parents upside down. They are so affected by the tragedy, that they cannot do things like they used to do, not even the smallest and most simple things. “He couldn’t bear to think of calling her to ask, like he used to do, about the rice (…) Such things. It couldn’t be done, it just couldn’t be done any more.” (P. 3, Ll. 61-63). After Doug’s passing, the main character and his wife is having a hard time living …show more content…

First off Christmas day becomes a symbol of the parent’s grief and loss of their beloved son. ”Remembrance Day had come and gone, but it would be Remembrance Day on Christmas Day. Even that was going to be terrible.”(P. 2, Ll. 5-6) Not only did they lose their son, but it also happened during Christmas, a holiday that is supposed to be spend with family and friends, filled with happiness and gifts. Another symbol that appears in the story is the curly pasta called Fusilli. Fusilli reminds the protagonist of the son he has lost. “It was why they’d eaten the things, that same evening (…) They’d been Doug’s “choice” (P. 4-5, Ll. 111-112). They ate Fusilli that evening in order to feel closer to their son as it reminds him of the last time they talked. The noisy children at Waitrose can also be seen as a symbol of the good life, or at least the good life seen from the protagonist’s eyes. “He looked at the mother’s strained, about-to-burst face. He thought: She doesn’t know how lucky she is.“(P. 4, l. 105) Even though she seems annoyed about how her children are acting up, she is still lucky to have them around. Something that the protagonist can only dream about and that people may take for granted until it is too …show more content…

The battle to live on with the, often unbearable, pain and guilt of outliving your child is never easy, especially because it is so unnatural to outlive them and sometimes a battle that cannot be won. This is something that is being dealt with in Graham Swift’s short story Fusilli. A man and his wife loosing their son in a war happening so far away and having to try and live on afterwards. Graham Swift uses some of the objects as the protagonist’s way of coping with the tragic loss of his son, especially the Pasta, Fusilli, plays a big part of the protagonist’s grieving as he is sticking to this object that reminds him of his son and their last conversations before he passed away. Holding on to objects is a natural thing to human beings as it can give some kind of connection or a way to remember a loved

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