Examples Of Individualism In The Return Of Martin Guerre

1428 Words3 Pages

Juliana Altman

Paper #3

Dr. Cook
Communities throughout Time

Communities throughout time have been shaped by the change of human rights, religion, and abstruse improvements—and in this case, the status on freedom actuates a communities values, morals, and ethics. The quality of a communities could be joined to its reliance from its physical and social aspects, therefore, when parts of a community are differentiated from those qualities, they end up in danger.
In the Return of Martin Guerre, Guerre himself was a prime example of the lack of individualism in the community. Clearly, there is a dilemma between collectivism and individualism within this French 16th century society. In the society of Artigat, religion was the determining …show more content…

But in any case theft was unpardonable by the Basque code, especially if done within the family. "The Basques are faithful," Judge Pierre de Lancre was to write; "they believe that theft is the work of a debased soul, of a low and abject heart; it bears witness to the demeaning neediness of a person." Martin Guerre had now placed himself in an impossible situation. "For fear of the severity of his father", he left - he left his patrimony, his parents, his son, and his wife - and not one word was heard from him for many years (24). Guerre was frowned upon until the unexpected arrival of Arnaud du Tihl. Martin Guerre had gained his own identity, however, with Arnaud du Tihl’s skills of integrating himself into the originally socially acceptable version of Guerre’s individual identity (representation of the family name), the illegal activities that Martin Guerre performed right before disappearing were overlooked and no punishment was enforced. Davis expresses the worries of authority with Martin Guerre’s form of individualism: the fear of “fragmenting” or “eroding” the community—however, because of Arnaud du Tihl’s play of such return (a loving husband, caring father, old friend of many) he is integrated safely back into Artigat’s individual family identity until he challenges Pierre’s patriarchal status, and in doing so, Arnaud’s plan backfires. This …show more content…

The acculturated man accepts he's cultivated beginning to end. So when a man like Kurtz abruptly ends up in the isolation of the wilderness and hears the whisperings of his dull driving forces, he is unable to battle them and turns into a monster. Heart of Darkness depicts an European human advancement that is pitifully and indiscriminately degenerate. The novella delineates European culture as empty at the center: Marlow depicts the white men he meets in Africa, as unfilled. Throughout Marlow contends that what Europeans call "human advancement" is shallow, a cover made by apprehension of the law and open disgrace that shrouds a dim

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