I think anotherin the
story has to do with the fact that these two individuals, Jig (the girl) and her lover, only
known as "The American," have clearly been physically intimate with each other, and
yet they seem unable to name the thing they are discussing or even to discuss it in what feels
like a frank, open, emotionally-intimate way. Then, the fact that we don't know the man's name
and he only refers to the woman by a presumed nickname makes them seem all the more alien to us
and to each other. The man says, of the abortion, "'I know you wouldn't mind it, Jig. It's
really not anything. It's just to let the air in.'" He keeps trying to reassure her about
the operation itself, while she continues to ask about if it will make them happy. He focuses on
the tangible aspects of their problemreassuring her that he'll be there, that it won't hurt, and
so onwhile she focuses on the intangible: their happiness and their love for each other, and how
those might be affected....
Friday, 25 September 2009
What is the irony of the story "Hills Like White Elephants"?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
To what degree were the U.S., Great Britain, Germany, the USSR, and Japan successful in regards to their efforts in economic mobilization during the...
This is an enormous question that can't really be answered fully in this small space. But a few generalizations can be made. Bo...
-
The love that exists between CÄrudatta and VasantasenÄ is clearly very strong as it endures throughout all manner of trials and tr...
-
We are given only a few glimpses of the lives of inner party members. However, those glimpses show us that this small group of party...
-
Eliza Doolittle undergoes various transformations as she is changed from a poor, Cockney, downtrodden flower girl to a lady who is d...
No comments:
Post a Comment