Le Through Hugo's Les Miserables: Positive Interpersonal Communication

577 Words2 Pages

The following section restates the main points of this paper and supports that stories are equipment for living which incorporate positive interpersonal communication ideas. Meaning they teach people how they should interact within the world and with others in order to create a just society for everyone. It is important to keep in mind that, “we inhabit the great stories of our culture. We live through stories. We are lived by the stories of our race and place…it is this enveloping and constituting function of stories that is especially important to sense more fully.” (Mair, 1998, p. 127). Stories tell people how to view the world, how to treat others, how to make the most out of their life, what the meaning of life is, and so much more. When stories are written for the people this allows the audience to connect with it. This is because there is at least one major aspect the audience can associate with, which is exactly how …show more content…

“Acknowledgment heads us in the direction of observation; hence, it requires us to do what our existence, itself, allows for: be open to the world” (Hyde, 2006, p. 48). When reading Les Misérables it is clear to see that many of the terrible stories that take place still exist today. Hugo exposes these stories in order to display the wrong a society can create in an attempt to make people aware and take the necessary actions to prevent unjust societies from existing. Hyde and many other scholars agree that the act of acknowledgment has the potential to change not only someone’s life, but the world. When people turn towards others, see them for who they are, and take necessary means to help them this leaves little room for a loneliness or corruption. The act of acknowledgment is so powerful that it can create peace, restore relationships, and even redirect depressing

Open Document