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Death and the Author

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We all struggle with our own immortality, many authors use death to declare their thoughts and beliefs on what it feels like, and what happens during the process of death. Stories such as Dorothy Richardson’s “Death” and Katherine Anne Porter’s “The Jilting of Granny Weatherall”, use a stream of conscious narration to get across to the reader that death is different and one in the same for everyone. Richardson and Porter use the stream of consciousness to add depth to their characters, and to tell the story of their characters experiences before dying and their thoughts of their life. Answers.com tells us that the stream of consciousness is a “literary technique that presents the thoughts and feelings of a character as they occur”. …show more content…

Porter shows us that Granny has no physical pain, just the psychological pain inflicted on her memory and her past life. She tells of the tale of being jilted at the alter during her early 20’s, she has never fully gotten over the man who left her without a word, but would like to see him again to let him know, “I had my husband just the same and my children and my house like any other women. A good house too, and a good husband that I loved and fine children out of him.” (344) Richardson’s outlook is on the physical pain before death, “that feeling rolling up within, telling her in words, …that this time she was going to be overwhelmed. That was the beginning, the warning, and the certainty. To be more and more next time, any minute, increasing till her life flowed out for all to see. Her heart thumped. The rush of life beating against the walls of her body, making her head spin, numbed the pain and brought a mist before her eyes”. (122)
Do we know when we are going to die? Both Richardson and Porter tell their stories as if they have died and come back to tell us all about it. Richardson’s character demonstrates to us that death is known to her. “This was death this time, no mistake. Her cheeks flushed at the

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