Into The Wild Rhetorical Analysis

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In Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer, Nick Jans writes a harshly written letter concerning the ineptitude of Christopher McCandless, a 24-year-old transcendentalist whom went out to Alaska with the intent of “living off the land for a couple months”, and died there. What Jans is missing from his letter that is crucial to the legitimacy of his argument, is an understanding of McCandless and his purposes for heading into the wild the way he did. This lack of comprehension leads Jans to typecast McCandless, and in doing so, completely underestimates him as an entity. This is seen in the statement, “‘I’ve run into several McCandless types out in the country. Same story: idealistic, energetic, young guys who overestimated themselves, underestimated the country, and ended up in trouble,’” (Pg.71). …show more content…

When McCandless entered the Alaskan wilderness, he went underprepared and painfully so, but in Krakauer’s words, “Although he was rash, untutored in the ways of the back country, and incautious to the point of foolhardiness, he wasn't incompetent-he wouldn't have lasted 113 days if he were” (Pg.85). “‘Sure, he screwed up, but I admire what he was trying to do,’” Roman (Pg.185), and what he was trying to do was more than just subsisting from scratch in the wild, he wanted to get away from the poisonous societal chains of

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