Innocence In Tim O Brien's The Things They Carried

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War is like a coming of age story; except the story is on fast forward, everything is happening too fast, and children are forced to become adults before they are full grown. Tim O'Brien's The Things They Carried showcases this coming of age, and the rendering of innocence that comes with it. He uses women as symbols to convey this loss of innocence to the reader. Martha, Linda, and Mary Anne all represent different aspects of innocence, and how the war tarnishes them. This corruption of innocence emphasizes how the war forces the soldiers to grow up too fast.

The first women O'Brien introduces in the book is Martha. She represents the childish, unrequited love that people experience when they are young. In the first sentence of the book, …show more content…

At the beginning, Mary is a seventeen year old girl, brought out to Vietnam by her soldier boyfriend. The men at the camp describe her as having "long white legs, blue eyes, and a complexion like a strawberry shortcake" (O'Brien 89). These descriptions characterize Mary as very pure and innocent. They give the reader an image of someone who does not belong in a war setting. Mary is from another world: the world the soldiers left behind. As time goes on, Mary's curiosity peaks, and she begins to learn about the things around her. Not only is she learning, but the people back home are too. The Vietnam war is the first televised war, and the atrocities disillusion the American public. In contrast, Mary does not become disillusioned, but only more intrigued. She begins to shift away from a "doll in her goddamn culottes" (O'Brien 92). The soldiers take note that "in many ways she remained naïve and immature, still a kid, but Cleveland Heights now seemed very far away" (O'Brien 94). Calling Mary a doll shows how unreal and plastic she seems to the soldiers in the war. That façade begins to melt as she goes out in ambush with the harsh

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