Waterland Essays

  • Analyzing the Characters of Waterland

    1909 Words  | 4 Pages

    of Waterland In "Waterland" Swift weaves a magical yet haunting tale of ordinary characters who live through they’re own struggles and problems unadorned by the complexity of world history yet forever revolving around the isolated and mysterious Fenns. His characters are a formidable mix of the stereotyped and the unordinary as he shows us how even the most common person can lead the strangest and most complex life and display a vast range of opposed emotions and thoughts. "Waterland" is

  • History and Story Telling in Graham Swift's Waterland

    2158 Words  | 5 Pages

    History and Story Telling in Graham Swift's Waterland Waterland uses history, theory, and fictional biography to address the question of history. The blurring of boundaries between history, story, and theory questions the construction of those boundaries as well as the closure and linear nature of traditional narrative. If Waterland has a beginning, it is far in the geologic past, at a time when the continents began their slow journey to the positions they now occupy; however, the novel itself

  • Waterland by Graham Swift

    1197 Words  | 3 Pages

    History is the study of past events. In his novel Waterland, Graham Swift entwines the past with the present to create a cyclical rhythm, which flows through the narrative. The narrative explores the notion of temporality and explains that instead of time following a linear pattern, it is, in fact, a circle, which moves in into itself, representing the past, the present, and the future. Chapters often end in the middle of a sentence, then picked up at the beginning of the following chapter, suggesting

  • Graham Swift's Waterland

    1160 Words  | 3 Pages

    Graham Swift's Waterland In Graham Swift’s Waterland, Tom Crick says, “Children, it was one of your number, a curly-haired boy called Price… who once… asserted roundly that history was ‘a fairy-tale’… ‘What matters… is the here and now. Not the past… The only important thing about history, I think, sir, is that it’s got to the point where it’s probably about to end’”(6,7). It is very likely that we all have come to a point in our education, at one time or another, where we have encountered sentiments

  • The Misconception between Communication and Miscommunication

    782 Words  | 2 Pages

    often said that communication, or lack of, can throw a major wrench in a story plot- but sometimes it can be considered a blessing in disguise. If you were to compare the story plot of Jane Austens’ Pride and Prejudice against that of Graham Swifts’ Waterland, you would hardly find any similarity. However the effects that communication and miscommunication have on each of the characters create a parallel between the two novels. Throughout Austens’ entire novel, miscommunication plays a key role in the

  • Waterland's Ending vs. Song of Solomon's Ending

    911 Words  | 2 Pages

    leave the audience guessing, making assumptions, but assuming that indeed, all is as well as it can possibly be, finally. Graham Swift creates a vivid description of many generations in a bleak, desolate location known as the fens in his novel Waterland.  His character of Dick Crick plays an enormous role throughout the novel, but Swift ends his novel with Dick drunkenly diving overboard into the water so vital to the rest of the novel. Toni Morrison creates an almost mythical story in a vivid

  • Example Of Epigenetic Essay

    725 Words  | 2 Pages

    When we say that “DNA is not destiny,” it means that what is in our DNA isn’t the end product because we can use Epigenetics to affect what genes may be turned off and on. Epigenetics “is the study of changes in gene activity that do not involve alterations to the genetic code but still get passed down to at least one successive generation” (Cloud, 2013). We can change our environment to reflect the changes in our genes. Some examples of these could include diet and exercise. This idea of Epigenetics

  • The Roles Of Women In Indian English Literature

    755 Words  | 2 Pages

    The social and cultural change in the post-independent India has made women conscious of the need to define themselves, their place in society and their surroundings. Women have become independent. They are the major voice in India. The women depicted in the emerging literature in India are modern and independent. There are changing faces. The female characters in such emerging writings are at great pains to free themselves from stultifying, traditional constraints. The female quest for identity

  • Post-Colonialism: Trying To Regain Ethnic Individuality

    1692 Words  | 4 Pages

    Indeed, the stranger has unusual customs. The white man held the paper like a sacred thing. His hands shook, and we mistrusted him... For how many moons will the stranger be among us? (Vera 43) The stranger still lives among the people of Zimbabwe, though the colonial political authority has left. Yet I wonder if the town elder speaking in the above passage from Yvonne Vera's Nehanda would recognize current Zimbabwean authorities as strangers or countrymen. Could he relate to today's government officials

  • Decoding Epigenetics: The Impact of Lifestyle on Genes

    1063 Words  | 3 Pages

    Epigenetics: The Effects of Lifestyle Choices on Genetic Factors Epigenetics can be defined through its own etymology: epi means on top of and genetic refers to our genes. Thus, epigenes are small chemical tags that sit on top of our DNA and chromatin with instructions for them. In order to best understand this concept, one must understand some fundamental truths about our DNA: Each person is born with a set strand of genes. What differentiates our cells from one another (say a blood cell from

  • Characters Dealing with Depression in Two Popular Contemporary Novels

    1008 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. New York: Vintage Contemporaries, 2004. 4, 8, 120, 133, 158, 184, 204, 220, 221. Print. Hader, Suzanne. "The Bildungsroman Genre." The Bildungsroman Genre: Great Expectations, Aurora Leigh, and Waterland. The Victorian Web, 21 February 2005. Web. 6 April 2014. Mukherjee, Siddhartha. "Post-Prozac Nation: The Science and History of Treating Depression." New York Times. 19 April 2012: 3-4. Web. 6 April. 2014. "The Victorian Bildungsroman." . Stanford

  • Film Industry: Christopher Nolan

    1119 Words  | 3 Pages

    Best known for his unique and non-linear style and to many people as the best director of the past decade, Christopher Jonathan James Nolan or just simply Christopher Nolan, is one of the most talented and influential film directors and screenwriters of our time. He, like most directors have never studied film and is a self-taught filmmaker. In this essay I am going to write about his early life and how he got into filmmaking. His early career and his rise to fame with Batman movies, his personal

  • The Bildungsroman Genre

    4243 Words  | 9 Pages

    pertaining to the bildungsroman genre and how a... ... middle of paper ... ...sroman in English: An Annotated Bibliography of Criticism. 1. Ed. New York: MLA, 1990. HADER, Suzanne. The bildungsroman Genre: Great Expectations, Aurora Leigh, and Waterland. Captured on November 5, 2000. Online. Availabe at http://classiclit.about.com/arts/classiclit/gi/dynamic/offsite.htm LANDOW, Georger P. Austen, Dickens, and Male-Female Relations. Captured on November 4, 2000. Available at http://landow.stg

  • The Colonization of Hawaii and Tourism

    4432 Words  | 9 Pages

    The Colonization of Hawaii and Tourism Since 1840 the Hawaiian Islands have been an escape to a tropical paradise for millions of tourists. People all over the world encounter alluring, romanticized pictures of Hawai'i's lush, tropical vegetation, exotic animals, beautiful beaches, crystal clear water, and fantastical women. This is the Hawai'i tourists know. This is the Hawai’i they visit. However, this Hawai'i is a state of mind, a corporate-produced image existing on the surface. More precisely