Battle Royal Archetypes

Words: 1051
Pages: 5

Essay #2 Nicholas Dunroe SMCC ENGL 115: Intro to Literature Mike Bove April 5, 2024 1.

Stories allow readers to decipher messages through hidden narratives that portray themes, impacting their overall importance in adhering to the plot. The absence of a message within a story creates ambiguous meaning, infringing upon the story's influential significance. Themes within narratives often facilitate symbolic elements portrayed within characters’ archetypes. These archetypes are contingent upon the story’s message and frequently leave a lasting impact on the reader. The word archetype carries an ambiguous connotation of an individual’s role, solidifying a dramatic effect within a story. Symbols are portrayed through insightful experiences or objects
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These traumatic experiences lead the reader to form an idea of the narrative through symbols, encaptivating the reader by giving us a first-person point of view through the narrators’ descriptions, which illustrate the disturbing details and lead to the formation of the characters’ archetypes. The author of Battle Royal capitalizes on emotion throughout the story, enforcing his themes by emphasizing the importance of the battle and the esteem at which the lower class carries out unjust actions. The author’s goal in doing so was to recognize the inequality the character experiences leading to the development as depicted through the eyes of the overarching protagonist. A symbol of inequality would be the dancer, as she is what all men desire; her beauty can only be admired from afar. These boys can only view from afar, signifying how the boy’s desires cannot be acted upon, further dehumanizing them. This conundrum is problematic because it breaks down their morals by instilling that they will never be good enough for a woman like her. White men gain control over not just their actions, but their emotions. This indifference highlights the differences but also similarities of emotions between the class of individuals, separating them based solely on race to dehumanize and gain worth through the oppression of another group. The …show more content…
This character development leads to a miraculous insight into the narrator’s ability to gain control of a situation in which he has no power, thanks to the insight of his grandfather. The author utilizes various significant life-changing events that form the character’s archetype by using symbols that captivate wisdom and knowledge, leaving a lasting imprint upon the reader. The Story of an Hour is another excellent example of how an author configures symbols to increase the themes’ notable imagery. Curating these examples throughout the text shows detailed imagery and significantly excels in adherence to the characters’ development. Chopin conveys Mrs. Mullards emotions: (Chopin) “She could see in the open square before her house the tops of trees that were all acquired with the new spring life.” Mrs. Mullard is envisioning her future as it takes over her whole body. Mullard was encaptivated by the possibility of a future without her husband, her feelings being deemed alluring, creating sorrow yet hope. Capitalizing on the despair, Chopin reinforces the emotional yet freeing experience Mrs. Mullard was undergoing in her final moments. The tree symbolizes the possibility of a new life without her husband and the possible opportunities. It will be a present. Mullard fails to recognize that this reaction will undoubtedly become her downfall. For failing to realize the emotional response of grievance for her husband,