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Imagery In The Things They Carried By Tim O Brien

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When intrinsic motivation contrasts with a culture’s norm, the individual often feels unable to express their own beliefs. In Tim O’Brien’s book, The Things They Carried, O’Brien recounts the time he was deployed to the Vietnam war to fight for the United States. As O’Brien reflects on his younger self “On Rainy River”, he reveals his old feelings of fear and resentment towards war. O’Brien uses daunting imagery to describe the scene,“I remember the rage in my stomach...I felt paralyzed. All around me the options seemed to be narrowing, as if I were hurtling down a huge black funnel, the whole world squeezing me tight...Moreover, I could not claim to be opposed to war as a matter of general principle” (O’Brien 40-41). The author uses somber …show more content…

He is filled with fierce anger because he is unable to reject the war. Feeling paralyzed corresponds to O’Brien’s dislike for war and for the values of his people because he feels that he has no options. Furthermore, the imagery in the phrase “I were hurtling down a huge black funnel” shows the O’Brien’s inability to differentiate between what he wants and what his culture wants. O’Brien is caught between two worlds, one that consists of what he wants for himself while the other is filled with his culture’s influence and ideals. The intense image of him “Hurtling down a huge black funnel” symbolizes O’Brien’s fear of being sucked into a war and potentially dying. The image of the funnel represents the war, and so his response to his draft is one of resentment because he feels that he is being separated from his life. While O’Brien is completely against the war, his culture deems fighting for one’s country noble, therefore not allowing him to claim that he is “opposed to war” because of “general principle”. If O’Brien shows his opposition, he would be a coward for not fighting for his

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