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Summary Of Zadie Smith's Two Men Arrive In A Village

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All around the globe, women and children are victimized and brutally beaten or even murdered. This issue has existed since the dawn of man and has even become a common tactic in wartimes. According to Akila Radhakrishnam, “There are very few modern conflicts that don’t include rape, because sexual violence against women is an easy way to erode the resilience of a community under attack,” (TIME.com). Zadie Smith brings light to this issue in her short story “Two Men Arrive in a Village,” by using a metafiction format and figures of speech. Although her story may seem uncentered and convoluted with her meta narration, there is still a strong theme of women empowering themselves and abuse of power by the opposite party. “Two Men Arrive in a Village,” is a metafiction piece, meaning it describes the writing process within the story. In using this technique, Smith is able to draw parallels from various stories that …show more content…

However, Smith makes the reader aware of the mistrust for these men, “This is one way that they arrive...the dread stillness and anticipation.” She then makes the undertone of sexual harassment clear, “And as they ate they bounced a girl each on their laps while the older women...wept,” (Smith). As the story progresses, the two men become more disrespectful of the villagers and show their ungratefulness by stealing things and calling them “gifts” for themselves. This leads to a fourteen-year-old boy taking a stand and attempting to attack one of the men which ends in the boy’s death. Smith uses the murder of the boy as the climax in this story. She describes the act of beheading him as, “the same fluid yet effortless gesture with which you might take the head off a flower.” She compares this devastatingly brutal act to a simplistic careless act which gives the reader evidence to infer that these men have no problem with abusing the power they hold from their

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