Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Margaret Laurences A Bird in the House Essay -- Laurence A Bird in th

Margaret Laurences A Bird in the House Margaret Laurences A Bird in the House differentiates itself from the quadruplet other novels that make up the Manawaka series that has helped establish her as an icon of Canadian literature. It does not present a single story instead, it is a compilation of eight well-crafted short stories (written between the years 1962 and 1970) that intertwine and combine into a single level, working as a whole without losing the essential independence of the parts. It tells - at to the lowest degree on a surface level - of the childhood of a young girl named Vanessa MacLeod , and of her trials and tribulations in the small Manitoban town of Manawaka. The narrative style of the stories is important, since it is with Vanessas own eyes that we learn of her family and life - yet the eyes belong to an older, wiser Vanessa, remembering her own childhood from a future point years later. Laurence handles the narrative style quite cleverly the expe riences of the child-Vanessa are portrayed with all the innocence and navety and shock that first accompanied them, yet are also corrupted and clarified by the wisdom of the older-Vanessa. ... the narrator becomes Vanessa, the woman, who takes on the voice and attributes of the child she was and, at the same time, remains her present self, far older and wiser in compassionateness and understanding.1 It is the perspective of the older and wiser Vanessa that allows the reader to pick up on the important ideas, images, and themes that the author is trying to convey to us. A Bird in the House is far more than semi-autobiographical, is far more than the simple story of a young girl growing up in the prairies during the great economic crisis it is a work of... ...e. The tightness of Laurences weaving is remarkable the symbols, the characters, and the characters are drawn together into a cohesive whole. ... the characters reflect the books central metaphor and are and so symb olically interconnected ... the stories chart how they are all caught up in parallel captivities and engaged in divergent flights. (Davidson 99) They are, indeed, all drawn together by the bird in the house.Works Cited1. qtd. in Davidson, Arnold E. Cages and Escapes in Margaret Laurences A Bird in the House. University of Windsor Review 16 (1981) 95.2.Margaret Laurence, A Bird in the House (Toronto McClelland & Stewart Inc., 1970), 43. every last(predicate) further references are to this edition and are included in my text.3. Jon Kertzer, That House in Manawaka Margaret Laurences A Bird in the House (Toronto ECW Press, 1992), 57.

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