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Tuesday, February 5, 2019

Characters as Portrayed Through Themes and Images in The English Patien

Characters as Portrayed Through Themes and Images in The English patient role While the four main characters of The English Patient are super powerful, and important to the readers understanding of the story, they cannot stand alone without the patterns of imagination, emblemism and metaphor which validate the text, and offer a complexity which extends beyond the literal level. These patterns reveal development about each character, and provide significant links between characters and moods which die hard to a greater understanding of the novel. Likewise, the plot would have little shock absorber upon the reader were the novel not so densely coloured with these patterns of imagery, symbol and metaphor amongst which skin, hands, mapping and the elements are particularly important. A metaphorical idea which resonates through with(predicate)out the novel, and is present in all of the characters (particularly the English patient and Caravaggio) is the judgment of man as a sort of communal Book, whereby every flavour of his life, and his relationships with others are mapped onto him. This also operates literally, through the obvious markings of scars on the English patient, and in Caravaggios case, the loss of both thumbs. ...his black body, beginning at his destroyed feet... ahove the shins the burn are worst. Beyond purple. Bone. This description of the English patients body is gruesome and confronting it addresses the stalk of pain, the construction of identity, and of course the physical evidence of his tortured past, which the reader learns much about as this imagery develops. It is almost as if his body is a landscape a war zone onto which all evidence of piteous is mapped. Imagery... ...o mirror the horrors of the wa rin which these four people are involved. The themes explored through the elements in particular, are complex and contradictory, just as the elements are themselves. Sometimes harsh, sometimes cleans ing, and almost always painful, these elements shape the characters and plot, and reside in much of the imagery explored in the novel. The techniques of symbolism, metaphor and imagery develop the novels themes of love, war, suffering and identity, which inform a reading of the novel which would not be as powerful through use of characters and plot alone. The subtlety and eloquence through which these themes are explored rattling inspire thought and reflection in the reader, which in turn credit a more complex understanding of the novel. Work Cited Ondaatje, Michael. The English Patient. capital of the United Kingdom Pan Books, 1993

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