In Another Country And The Box Comparison

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The movie “The Box” shares similarities with three short stories: “In Another Country”, “Life Without Drama”, and “The Princess”. Both “In Another Country” and “The Box” deal with disability. In “In Another Country”, the protagonist has been disabled from fighting in the First World War. His friends in the story are connected with him through the rehabilitation they all go through. Disability is also present in ‘The Box”. Arthur’s wife has a foot injury, thanks to a childhood accident. The man running the box test, Arlington Steward, has a mysterious injury that removed a large part of his face, later revealed to be a lightning strike. Later, Steward asks Arthur’s wife about her initial reaction towards his face, expecting a reaction of …show more content…

Similarly, in “The Box”, disability temporarily brings together Arthur’s wife and Steward. Both works show disability as a powerful, common human experience which can bring people together. “The Box” and “A Life Without Drama" show their similarity in their protagonists. In “Life Without Drama”, the protagonist is an everyman character, who leads a completely normal life. In “The Box”, the protagonists live an average American middle-class life. While the husband works at NASA, he is not particularly noteworthy there, and his family is of average wealth. Both works use everyman characters to deliver their desired messages, and the messages come from what happens or doesn’t happen to the characters, not what they are. “The Princess” and “The Box” are similar in the ways they portray the effects of wealth. In “The Princess”, the protagonist, the princess, is shown to be callous, and contemptuous of the lower classes. She fires her doctor for no real reason, and only spends little money on charity, and only for the sake being seen as generous. In “The Box”, the protagonists also demonstrate a lack of care for human

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