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'The Cask Of Amontillado, AndLetter From Birmingham Jail'

Decent Essays

The theme of confinement in several literary works often signifies a deeper tension amongst characters or greater institutions. In Andre Dubus’ “Killings,” Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Cask of Amontillado,” and Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” the main figures in the works face undesirable tension due to outside sources. In “Killings” and “The Cask of Amontillado,” Matt Fowler and Montresor face confinement due to another character within their respective stories; however, in “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” King addresses the figurative confinement of black Americans during the 1950s due to segregation, discrimination and bigotry. All three literary works also address and imply figurative and literal forms of confinement as the main figures look to free themselves from what is restricting them. The overall theme of confinement expressed leads to the establishment of tension, further leading to the question of how does this tension effect the main figures of each literary work?
In “Killings” by Andre Dubus, there is an obvious tension between Matt Fowler and Richard Strout. Following the murder of his son, Matt loses the “pleasurable days of fatherhood” and “had not been able to think about any of the small pleasures he believed he had earned,” (Dubus 1124). Matt struggles to recover from the loss of his son and is confined by Strout being placed on parole instead of behind bars. Throughout the story, Matt seeks freedom from his confinement by getting revenge

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