Analysis Of Isaac Bashevis Singer's 'A Wedding In Brownsville'

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The modern short Jewish American post-holocaust story, by its open ending finale, A Wedding in Brownsville by Isaac Bashevis Singer is about Dr. Solomon, who was benevolent with the Jew community and also was an eminent doctor. Solomon was invited to a Jew wedding in Brownsville. There were a lot of people that talked Dr. Solomon to mention him all their dead family and how they perished. Later, he encounters with the love of his life, Raizel; but, that girl looks the same age she passed away. So definitely, Dr. Solomon sees deceased people. Does this mean that he is lifeless? Dr. Solomon took a taxi to go to the wedding. On the road he thinks whether or not a God exists, and if it exits, why he could permit that catastrophes like genocide and illness to exist; of what could possibly been thinking his uncles that were digging their own graves (Singer). Therefore, his existential thoughts could have been the same ones that his uncles had. Subsequently, he starts to compare the glowing violet of the sky to the heavens vault and almost immediately, “On Eastern Parkway the taxi was jolted and screeched suddenly to a stop” …show more content…

The foggy hall was spinning like a carousel; the floor was rocking.” (Singer). So, Dr. Margolin felt dizzy, perhaps a consequence of his faded soul because maybe he is dead. Then, he encounters with an ageless Raizel, he began to converse with her, he states that she is dead, then he is unsure about that and then he wants to marry her, because according to Jewish law, he is a single man. So, he proceeded to search a coin so he could marry her but his wallet was gone. Then he tried to remember and he actually became aware that he may be dead so he checked his pulse and there wasn’t one, (Singer). Immediately “The sensation of weight, the muscular tension of his limbs, the hidden aches in his bones, all seemed to be gone.” (Singer), this showing that he is indeed,

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