Friday, May 17, 2019

Mrs. Turner Cutting the Grass Essay

In the short story Mrs. food turner Cutting the Grass by Carol Shields, the ideology of not judging a book by its cover can be seen as a master(prenominal) theme of the story as it shows the main character, Geraldine being judged by everyone that surrounds her all passim her support. Shields demonstrates this by taking the audience on a voyage through her life giving the reader flashbacks of her life as a young teen to a sight to see on a hot afternoon in June, giving a place of a static character development as she remains stubborn and oblivious all throughout her life. This is depicted through third soul narration, which presents a conflict of man vs. society point of bring in within Mrs. turners life. The narration throughout the story is in third person as the narrator always refers to the main character as Mrs. Turner, Geraldine or Girlie instead of using the first person perspective.The point of view is from a single narration that is omniscient since we are given new( prenominal) characters perspectives towards Mrs. Turner and how they feel about her. Throughout the story, she is depicted as impulsive, rebellious, getting herself stuck in bad situations and instead of functional out her problems she runs away. The Man vs. Society conflict perspective can be seen through the way other people evaluate her and her life choices. She is negatively judged, for example, by the way she carelessly the cuts the grass, her negligent use of the mess killer and even in the professors poem The Golden Pavilion, which contrasts the American tourist, in this case represented by Geraldine and her sisters, describing Geraldine as a little pug of a women against the majesty and looker of the golden pavilion of Kyoto Japan.The professor, in this poem, depicts her ignorance and outward appearance in a negative light implying a shallow, superficial life. Interestingly, we are told little about how the character sees herself. Given the fact that Geraldine dropped out of high schoolhouse at the age of sixteen and worked at the Boissevain Dairy until the age of nineteen, it could be assumed that perhaps her life was really quite difficult.

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