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Essay on Isolation in Sherwood Anderson's Winesburg, Ohio

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Isolation in Winesburg, Ohio

Winesburg, Ohio is a story of lost or nonexistent connections with other human beings. Every character throughout the text has a want, a need, to connect with someone or something. Each individual faces a life of isolation. In most cases the solitary nature of their lives is self-inflicted. This self-punishment seems to be the outcome of a deeply personal hatred towards the characters' perceived differences with the rest of the Winesburg population. This is the fact that elevates Winesburg, Ohio above the rest. It is the fact that every man hides a part of himself from the eyes of others.

The hunger was earliest demonstrated in the short story Hands. In this episode the …show more content…

Each character seems to deteriorate into a simply physical being with no with no living soul left. This is best stated in the words of Irving Howe. He wrote, "The grotesques rot because they are unused, their energies deprived of outlet, and their instincts curdled in isolation" (Howe). This rotting effect is evident in several other characters; however, it can be most strongly noticed within Elizabeth Willard.

Elizabeth Willard, the mother of George Willard, was a wild girl with many dreams. One of her most prevalent was to become a great actress, and work in a traveling company much like those that visited and passed through Winesburg. Upon marrying Tom Willard, Elizabeth's world changed drastically. It seemed her fiery spirit had been broken. No longer did she chase her dreams. They were traded instead to become a maid of sorts to her inherited business. Within her life there was but one joy left and that was Elizabeth's only son, George. Much like his mother was, George is a dreamer. He aspired to become a writer rather than the financial success his father pushes him to be. This was Elizabeth's single hope for her son. Yet in her own eyes she was a failure, a broken old woman, and could not find the strength to express these strong feelings to her son. It was the self-perceived defeat that prevented Elizabeth from speaking. Like Wing Biddlebaum and the remaining group of outcasts she hid herself away. In essence,

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