The concept of simply extending the truth blurs the line between what is actually true, and what is just plain lies. While the twisting of stories appear to have no major affect on society, the sum of these untruthful phrases exerts detrimental side effects on what appears to be the most concrete aspect of society: the past. Grendel acknowledges the duality of this fragile line, and observes the Danes wistfully while they partake in their own intentional demise. While their lives are made fanciful through lies, they are essentially changing their history and causing irreversible damage, Grendel’s complex attitude toward the Danes, full of awe and pain, demonstrates the catastrophic effects of altering the truth; although lies can embellish …show more content…
The Danes’ stories are described as “magnificent [and] golden.. [and] lies”. While some aspects of the truth remain in these stories, ultimately, the full story does not remain. Yet, Grendel is still impressed by these tales, and how life seems more “magnificent”. The contrast between these “lies” and how they are described demonstrates the deceiving nature of twisting the truth. In summary, these lies course Grendel into viewing the Danes and their storytelling skills with awe.
However, despite these laws being pleasant to Grendel, they ultimately cause him pain; this demonstrates how lies harm society through the use of emotional juxtaposition. The stories the Danes tell “filled [Grendel} with sorrow and tenderness”. Despite the tender aspect of these lies, they fill Grendel with sorrow. These twisted truths ruin the honor and trust within society, and replaces these values with a fase past. Furthermore, Grendel's all turns into pain when he realizes that these lies have permanent detrimental effects on
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After hearing the dishonest story, Grendel “clutched the sides of [his] head as if to heal the split, but [he] couldn’t”. Grendel’s action is ineffective in preventing his own personal memory from being torn apart. His failure demonstrates that despite how desperately society attempts to cling on to the truthful past, lines will ultimately prevail. Furthermore, the physical pain parallels the general pain he feels toward the Danes for changing history the way they
John Gardner’s Grendel is the retelling of the heroic epic poem Beowulf; however, the viewpoint has shifted. Grendel is told from the viewpoint of one of Beowulf’s antagonists and the titular character of Gardner’s work—Grendel. In Grendel, Gardner humanizes Grendel by emphasizing parallels between Grendel’s life and human life. Through Gardner’s reflection of human feelings, human development, and human flaws in Grendel, this seemingly antagonistic, monstrous character becomes understood and made “human.”
In the Epic Poems Beowulf, by an anonymous Anglo-Saxon poet, and Grendel written by John Gardner, Grendel, regardless of what he does, has been seen as unsafe to man. Grendel, perceived as treacherous, is just misunderstood and an outcast to society. The back story of Grendel is crucial to the reader’s understanding of Grendel becoming a monster. Grendel’s life experiences of his environment, men and meeting a dragon contribute to the drastic change.
A. Grendel is impatient with the music and celebration of Hrothgar’s men; his home is a hell on earth; he was born in slime; his parents are the children of Cain, who were exiled by God; he is family to “a thousand forms of evil,” who angrily fight against God.
There is a stage in everyone’s life where they feel they are not accepted by someone or something. Whether it is because of one’s age, appearance, or emotional and mental stability, a sense of disproval and isolation appears to be glaring through the eyes of society. Throughout Grendel’s life, he is shunned from humanity for he was viewed as something of destruction and harm. However, not one person ever took the time out to see Grendel’s true personality or really discover what he was all about. When facing the realities of the cruel world, Grendel found himself severely struggling with some psychological deficiencies. After performing multiple psychoanalysis tests on Grendel’s behavior, his
This book review covered the viewpoint of Truth and Perception on the book “Grendel”. From the book, I learned that people who do not feel who fit into the society want to practice such activities because they feel as though they do not fit, though this is just a perception. I believe a perception is a way of seeing society and your surroundings. Grendel underestimates himself thinking that because his reputation is a monster, he has to bring out his monstrous character to defend himself from people because they believe they do not fit in. This also relates to civil rights because like white people did not accept dark-skinned, Grendel was facing the same situation in another aspect. His perception of himself brings out the truth about himself,
“I won’t shift afoot when I meet the cave-guard.” This quote shows the courage and bravery of a warrior during this time. In the Anglo-Saxon Beowulf and John Gardner’s Grendel, the difference in the point of views give a change to the author’s style and the narration of the two writings. The difference in literary purpose behind the two writings affects the motivation and the language.
Is Grendel Evil or Victim to Circumstance? : How humanity has a tendency to put labels on people they don’t really understand.
“Beowulf” and Grendel are two tales similar in many ways, yet different from each other. These stories are like a coin; you cannot have one side without the other. Just as the sides of a coin share the same coin, these stories share a similar plot, a setting, and tell of the same events. The sides of a coin also have differences as do “Beowulf” and Grendel. In the case of these two tales this difference is in their respective philosophical views.
The poem does not give this insight of what happens before, or from Grendel's point of view. Seeing this scene in the movie gives the audience a better understanding of why Grendel and also his mother attack the Danes. Later in the movie Beowulf says, "He's no more human than you and I", which is true. If the Danes didn’t kill Grendel's father, the outcome of the story could have possibly been changed because Grendel would have had a different life and not seek revenge on the Danes, specifically the one who Grendel had seen kill his father. In the poem Grendel fights Beowulf, rather than avoiding Beowulf most of the time in the movie. In the poem, Grendel is seen as an evil monster that kills and eats the Hrothgar warriors and cannot be penetrated by weapons, rather than just human, or troll, like the movie. When the battle with Grendel occurs in the poem, it is said that Beowulf had cut off his arm to defeat him. While in the movie, Grendel finds himself stuck hanging, and must cut off his own arm to escape from Beowulf and his men. Both the movie and poem result in the death of Grendel, eventually leading to the revenge of his mother.
The novel “Grendel” by John Gardner can be seen as reconstruction of “Beowulf” an epic tale with the considered beast showing his innocence and loneliness. The novel and the epic are models where there are two point of views on a main situation. In “Grendel” the monster is someone who is lost through the words of the Shaper and the Dragon, and is trying to fit in and make friends. Due to the words of the Dragon Grendel is able to be comfortable with being seen as a monster and takes on the role of a villain. Through the novel one can see how the author express himself after being involved with the death of his brother. John Gardner’s novel, “Grendel” can be seen as a reflection of the author’s life involving the death of his younger brother through the way the characters act and specific details, Grendel’s interactions with his mom, and the ideology and principles.
Grendel’s lives under the hall of Herot. The Danes are celebrating with loud music, alcohol, and dancing. Grendel became deranged and took matter into his own hands or his claws. While the men were passed out from being drunk, he snuck into Herot and ate the men one by one. In Grendel’s perception, he is doing the right
“[Grendel’s] mother had sallied forth on a savage journey,/ grief-racked and ravenous, desperate for revenge” (Beowulf, 1276-1278). Her desire to avenge her son is carried out, but it ultimately leads to her death. Beowulf’s desire to garner fame and respect overpowers all of the raw emotion and anger felt by Grendel’s mother. She serves the purpose of showing the purest form of revenge, and how its blindness can lead to one’s demise.
The Danes holds a grudge against Grendel and his mother for the fact that Grendel terrorized them for a long time and they feel the only way to live in peace is to kill him. They also feel that they have done nothing to Grendel in return for him terrorizing them and to justify the countless amount he has killed they find that they will live in peace once he is killed. On the other hand the ogre’s feel that being what they are is a curse and that they will never be blessed, so as to exact a
The story of Beowulf is a heroic epic, chronicling the distinguished deeds of the great Geatish warrior, Beowulf, who travels across the seas to rid the Danes of the evil monster Grendel, who has been inflicting destruction and terrorizing the kingdom. Beowulf is glorified for his heroic deeds of ridding the land fiendish monsters and stopping the scourge of evil, while the monster, Grendel, is portrayed as a repugnant creature who deserves death for its evil actions. However, many have disagreed with such a simplistic and biased representation of Grendel and his role in the epic poem. John Gardner in his book, Grendel, sets out to change the reader’s perception of Grendel and his role in Beowulf by narrating the story through Grendel’s point of view. John Gardner transforms Grendel, once perceived as an evil fiend in Beowulf, into a lonely but intelligent outcast who is actually quite similar to humans, due to his intelligence capacity for rational thought and his real, and at times irrational emotions. Gardner portrays Grendel as a hurt individual and as a victim of oppression, ostracized from civilization. Although the two works revolve around the same basic plot,, the themes and characters in Beowulf and Grendel are often different and sometimes contradictory.
Beowulf and Grendel are two different stories, and characters, who look at the same situation in polarized ways. Each character has their own story that is written from different time periods: the Anglo-Saxon time period and America in the 1970’s. Both of these time periods have different attributes that make them special; the Anglo-Saxon time period consists of the literary movement of the epic poem and America in the 1970’s consists of the literary movement known as postmodernism. Beowulf is shaped by the Anglo-Saxon time period through its use of the heroic code and religious influences and Grendel is shaped by the American 1970’s time period through its use of metafiction and an unreliable narrator.