The Man From Mars Character Analysis

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Characters in a book are sometimes loved or hated by readers. Sometimes this hate or love for a character will transform into the opposite, hate into love, and love into hate. Simply because as the story went with the character it started to evolve and transform before the reader 's eyes. Once they think they know everything about a character, something different and shocking will happen to prove the fact wrong. In the story, “The Man From Mars” by Margaret Atwood, the main character, Christine goes through a transformation from the beginning of the story to the end. Throughout her life nobody gave Christine a second glance when it came to dating. Until one day she helped a foreigner and suddenly he started to stalk her. Christine starts off …show more content…

With an unknown male that nobody knows anything about people on campus are suddenly starting no notice Christine. Atwood comments, “. . . an odd result: mysterious in itself, it rendered her equally mysterious” (27). Now suddenly because this guy was following her all around others started to become curious as to what it was about Christine that attracted her to him. People became interested and suddenly Christine was no more than just a plain Jane on campus. She had turned into a mysterious female who obviously must have something interesting about her to warrant a male following her. Suddenly Christine is not so adverse to her stalker following her around anymore. Things take a turn when it is revealed that the man in deported from the country. Atwood reveals, “. . . the one man who had found her irresistible; though she often wondered, inspecting her unchanged [body] . . .” (31). Her stalker had been deported and no information had been revealed for why he had chosen to follow Christine. The police made guesses as to why, but nothing solid could be claimed as the reason. Evidently this lead to Christine to ponder on what it was about her that made him so interested in her. Christine undergoes another mental change as time goes on with him being gone from the life. Atwood describes these changes as, “Obsessively she brought magazines . . . she watched late-night newscasts, …show more content…

With her being portrayed as a plain looking female who was seen as an honorary 'male ' to mysterious and intriguing woman. Along with the development with her not wanting anything to do with her stalker to suddenly becoming obsessed with him. She goes through self-reflection when he is deported about what about she attracted him to her. With the changes that Christine went through it allowed the readers to understand how a single person can change mentally because of another. Slowly she broke away from her plain loosing self, and emerged into this independent young lady who got the job she

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