Overview: Twisted by Laurie Halse Andersone

1476 Words3 Pages

Is choosing the wrong path to find the real you a bad thing? In a story generally the

protagonist pulls on different types of archetypes to learn from their mistakes and be different

with those strengths. In the novel, Twisted by Laurie Halse Anderson, the protagonist, Tyler

needs to go through phases in order to ultimately achieve the goal of self-identity that not

necessarily he wants but the society accepts. So the journey begins, with Tyler in the front seat,

searching for a person he could be, he uses his friends, friends of friends, his physical

surroundings, to be one person in all of his obstacles.

Tyler establishes in the beginning of the novel, his ordinary world. The first incident that

happens in the novel shows the foundation of his want to change. Phil Sullivan, explains, “The

mythic story of the questing hero is a metaphor of the inward journey to self-knowledge, that

nebulous goal of almost all education”. Interpreting this way, one is to believe all

wanders wander for a cause, and that cause is ultimately education. We wander because the

world is unknown, one tries to be the best but if one does not know whats out there then one not

ought to know. Tyler at this point of the novel does graffiti on the school property because he

wants to not be nerdy kid in the classroom invisible and not living per say. He does not know

anything besides school books and everyone tells him to be this or that but no one tells him how.

“Everybody told me to be a man. Nobody told me how” (Blurb, Anderson). At this point he

pursues the bad boy image, and he does not even know it.

When a hero lives in a set life, it usually wake up, job, and sleep again. There is a set

rules that maybe are not set...

... middle of paper ...

... had all of this

dignity in the beginning, he did not even know it.

Tyler even after his return to the ordinary world with his elixir, he learns to forgive

something he was not looking for during his

Works Cited

Booth, W. C., Colomb, G. G., & Williams, J. M. (1995). The craft of research. Chicago, IL: The

University of Chicago Press.

Campbell, J. (1970). The hero with a thousand faces. New York, NY: World Publishing.

MD: Rowman & Littlefield. Mayes, C. (2010). The archetypal hero’s journey: A study in Jungian

pedagogy in teaching and learning. Madison, WI: Atwood. Merriam, S. B. (1998).

Qualitative research and case study applications in education.

San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. Palmer, P. (2000). Let your life speak. San Francisco, CA:

Jossey-Bass. Pearson, C. S. (1998). The hero within: Six archetypes we live by. New York:

HarperOne.

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