Turn of the Screw: A Cigar is Just a Cigar

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Ambiguity by definition is an attribute of any concept, idea, and statement or claims whose meaning, intention or interpretation cannot be definitively resolved according to the rules of or process consisting of a finite number of steps. And ambiguity in plays can make the reader think in ways never thought possible, the many different meanings and outcomes. Similar to Sigmund Freud and his dream theory of not everything in a dream has relevance, cigar in a dream could mean a falase or it could be just a cigar. Henry James, Author of Turn of the Screw doesn’t play that game of a cigar is just a cigar, just look at his ending it shows both the Governess and little boy Miles sitting in the Bly estate one dead the other alive. This isn’t your average tale you have to go back pick through, a try to make sense of it all; from the multiple perspectives of the narrator, Henry James, and the talk of the Governess. In essence ambiguity plays a major role in the novella, Turn of the Screw; it shows there are many different aspects of the story, a story with in a story that leads the reader to a cliffhanger that makes us go WTF. Turn of the screw, although a great story ends abruptly, with the death of Miles, did the Governess kill the boy, did the ghost finally appear, or did the boy die of excitement? All valid questions that we don’t truly know the answers to, unless we go back in through the novella and pick apart everything that Henry James wrote, and even going into the unknown narrator of the story.
In the 1898 novella, Turn of the Screw by Henry James, the story revolves around many events, sightings and even individuals; I personally believe that four things play a major role in the novella Turn of the Screw: the author, The Narrat...

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...ing, supervising and the general upbringing of Miles and Flora in the country estate of Bly. Of course this is a very huge challenge as the Governess can be seen as fallen head over heels for the Miles and Floras uncle. The Governess is completely dedicated to the children and the other tasks that she is given by the childrens uncle; she shapes this plan that if she does an amazing job she may be able to move up the social ladder and get herself a rich husband. In doing so, she becomes over protecting and over bearing of the children, she see’s but yet, she also un-see’s the things around her, seeing both the children playing and stopping as if realizing something just walked up. Even Miles at the end of the book believes the ghost of Peter Quint is there, running towards the window only for his soul to be whisked away from him, laying limp in the Governesses arms

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