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David Sedaris 'Faith And Jesus Shaves'

Decent Essays

Jessica Murray
Professor O’Bryan
ENG 102 – Intermediate Composition/ Literature/Critical Thinking
28 July 2015
Faith and Jesus Shaves
Jesus Shaves by David Sedaris takes place during a French class’s discussion of French holidays. In the story, David Sedaris addresses faith as a theme and the motivation and value behind it. When the French teacher asks what takes place during Easter, a Moroccan student tells the class that she honestly has never heard of the Christian celebration that everyone else in the class is referring to as Easter. The rest of the story chronicles the class's attempt to describe Easter to the Moroccan student in broken French. The story is narrated in the first person perspective by someone whom we can assume is an American …show more content…

Sedaris, an openly gay writer, uses his own life and the oddities of everyday life as material for stories that often combine elements of both fiction and nonfiction. He gained public recognition in 1992 after National Public Radio (NPR) broadcast his essay of "Santaland Diaries". His next five essay collections, Naked, Holidays on Ice, Me Talk Pretty One Day, Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim, and When You Are Engulfed in Flames all became New York Times Best Sellers. Most of Sedaris' humor is autobiographical and self-deprecating, and often draws influence upon his family life, middle-class upbringing in the suburban Raleigh, North Carolina, his Greek heritage, homosexuality, jobs, education, drug use, and obsessive behaviors, and the time he spent in France, London, and the English South …show more content…

The narrator expresses the struggle he or she has with French, but doesn’t give up because of faith that he has that someday he will “get” French and someday be able to have a fluent conversation (Sedaris 473). Much like religion, it is hard to completely understand and it may seem impossible, yet there is still faith in the idea that one day the answers and the knowledge will be attainable. At first, the narrator seems to not be an open person because of the Easter bunny debate, and his inability to accept the idea of the bell. Even though the speaker is told that the chocolate is brought in by a giant bell, he cannot have blind faith and believe the teacher’s words for what they are. Faith is not just something that can be forced – the person has to also believe it on their own. Faith is confidence or trust in a person or belief and it is not based on truth. The speaker does not “trust his teacher because he believes in Easter as Americans celebrate it. In his mind that is how Easter has always been celebrated and that his way is the proper way. Any other unfamiliar Easter tradition would just seem like an outlandish lie. Despite that, the narrator shows a great deal of growth in his or her own religious faith because the narrator makes a connection with the other students and their shared inability to master the language

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