Farewell To Manzanar Memoir

Words: 561
Pages: 3

The light that shines from a piece of writing creates perspective, in that every eye who reads it sees the writing in its own distinct ways. A piece of writing that can dim and brighten is Farewell to Manzanar. The text is written from a perspective, an autobiographical one to be exact, of what was going through the author’s headspace while the events unfolded. Jeanne wrote her views on her experience, but others can take their own words onto that story and place it how they see it. Changing what is written to how it is viewed doesn’t have to change the initial point of the memoir. Many interpretations can be taken from such a memoir and story as the filmmakers chose to incorporate more realism into the memoir. The realism shown is in replace of Jeanne's head space …show more content…
The filmmakers did add expression into the scene but didn’t depart from the point driven to its audience and still conveyed the fear and confusion expressed. The dysfunctionality of the family is being showcased, but not as it was within the book, however. The memoir describes the arguments of the family and how the family takes to it, straining their status. An argument, within the text, that ended with a member of the family, Kiyo, running out of the house is when Jeanne learned people talked about her father as an inu. Once Ko found out about the gossip they had learned he grew angry and threatened Mama, which ended in Kiyo stopping his father and running out of the barrack. In the film, the creators chose to take a tame path into the reason how Jeanne learned of the meaning of inu. It was her two brothers arguing, Teddy and Frank, and used the term inu and ended with Frank leaving due to the tension and anger that had been raised. The situations both create an image of the dysfunctionality of the family as their strained relationship creates tension and anger, leading to