The presentation board’s symbols represented the conflicts and the endeavours, that characterized Jeannette. First of all, the background of the visual was pink, Jeannette’s favourite colour. In addition, the road symbolized the path the Walls family travelled and the placement of the cities indicated whether the experience was positive or negative. The closer the city was to the top of the page, the more enjoyable that experience was to Jeannette. The wine expressed the internal struggles that Rex Walls had between his dreams (building the Glass Castle) and bad memories (Erma abusing him as a child and the crib death of his second child). The gravestone portrayed Jeannette’s realization of how important Rex Walls was to her, after he died.
Author Jeannette Walls, in her memoir, The Glass Castle, revisits her childhood memories and relationships with her family. Walls’ purpose is to persuade people that you’re past doesn’t define who you are. To achieve her purpose, she uses a conversational tone with imagery, contrasting syntax, and anaphora in order to inspire readers to overcome their own problems.
Although we all have an idealistic dream of a perfect life, we should always see life how it is and not how you want it to be. Dreaming big has inspired many people into creating things like no one has ever seen, however, because dreams don’t always come true people may live in a state of depression and sadness.
In the passage from The Glass Castle, Erma kicks the children out of the house because of a physical fight that they got in with her. They caught her inappropriately touching Brian. Even though they fought her to protect their brother, they faced consequences. Jeannette Walls shows that even when you are fighting for the right reason, you will still face consequences. Walls uses the imagery of the house to show the central idea.
In the memoir, The Glass Castle, it was evident the Glass Castle was not just a physical object itself, but holds a deeper meaning of symbolism towards the author, Jeannette Walls. After completing the book, it has been noted that the Glass Castle symbolizes the constant reminder of Jeannette’s hope that one day both her family and house will be in a stable, working position. Throughout the novel, the Glass Castle was vaguely mentioned as the Walls family continued their journey through the United States. However, through their ongoing journey, Jeannette’s view of the Glass Castle changed, as it was inevitably just a vision that her father had implanted in her brain but never actually built in reality.
Walls utilizes metaphors in her memoir to show how throughout life you have to look after yourself and you have to know how to pull yourself through. In the text, she states, “If you don’t want to sink, you better figure out how to swim.” (Walls 66) Rex Walls compares the life lesson and swimming to make a point to Jennette that in life you have to take care of yourself in order to survive in this world. Due to her not knowing how to swim, he would repeatedly throw her into the water and pick her back up before she would sink to learn how to swim.
Any man that has children has the responsibility to be the best role model they can be. Been the best role model for a child is going to shaped how that child is going to be when they become an adult. But, if they are bad role model to their children, then, the children's future would not turn out to be successful, but very few can be successful. In the novel, The Glass Castle, by Jeannette Walls, Rex, Jeannette’s father, is an unsympathetic character because of his horrible example to his children. This can be viewed throughout the book because he is an alcoholic, uncaring, and selfish person. Rex is a very irresponsible person that only very few can relate.
Every kid wants to be able to go out whenever they want to, and yet a child wants to come home to a bed to sleep on every night. The question of whether a child wants to have freedom or security is one that someone can contemplate over and over again, and the more you think about it, the more your mind could alternate between the two options. After reading the novel The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls, which is a memoir that describes the life of her nomadic family of six who dealt financial, family, social, and emotional issues all the way from her father being an alcoholic or the children at her school bullying her for her dirty clothes. The children had to deal with unusual circumstances in order to survive the ordeal, and while sometimes
A trauma narrative is a narrative that describes an experience or experiences that cause someone to be destressed and cannot be incorporated into their memory easily. Throughout her own traumatic narrative, Jeannette Wall’s describes different aspects of her everyday life that showcase various levels of significance. She is able to show how certain life events impact her plans for escaping her current socioeconomic status and her plans for the future. The text is also able to tell us about trauma, poverty, ourselves, and our society. Furthermore, the text demonstrates the impact that trauma and poverty can have and how they can have lasting effects. These concepts help us to think about our own life experiences and situations and they also show us how to be analytical about our society. Lastly, this narrative is able to reveal to us the different aspects of a traumatic childhood and how important and impactful this type of upbringing can be. Jeannette Walls uses her own traumatic autobiography to show that despite her adverse upbringing in poverty and passive and unattached parenting she was able to become successful. The Glass Castle, by Jeannette Walls, shows the benefits and the value that can come from having a traumatic narrative. This is significant because it shows that an experience can shape a person, but a person can also shape the experience.
In this both heart wrenching and slightly humorous memoir, successful journalist Jeannette Walls tells the bittersweet story of her rather dysfunctional and poverty stricken upbringing. Walls grows up in a family trailed by the ubiquitous presence of hunger and broken down homes. Throughout the memoir she recounts memories of moving from one dilapidated neighborhood to another with her three other siblings, insanely "free sprinted" mother, and incredibly intelligent yet alcoholic father. The author focuses on her unconventional childhood with somewhat unfit parents much too lazy and self-absorbed to even obtain decent jobs. Although Walls's childhood gushes with heartbreaking tales of searching through dumpsters for food, she remains as
In the beginning of the book, Jeanette’s father promises to build her a dream house in which she and her family could finally live the life they deserve. As the story progresses, Jeanette realizes that her father’s promise would go unfulfilled yet the glass castle remains as an image of hope. Through her arduous upbringing, Jeanette continues to hold on to the idea of the glass castle with a sort of childhood innocence even at the end of the book when it becomes apparent that “[Rex Wall will] never build the Glass Castle.” As it influenced the lives of both Jeanette and Rex Walls and helped them not only survive but overcome their onerous situations, The Glass Castle remains one of the biggest symbols throughout the
A memoir is our modern version of a fairy-tale, it is a biography written from personal knowledge or special account. In The Glass Castle, Jeannette Walls recalls her childhood memories with her family. From Rex Walls, her father, allowing her into the cheetah den to his last moments with her before she moved to New York. The Glass Castle was truly effective from the beginning to the very end of the book. Jeanette writes The Glass Castle to show to older teens that no matter how bad your childhood is or was, it doesn't mean that your future will be bad also, since you can grow out of it if you can really try.
There are many conflicts present in the book The Glass Castle. To begin, there the external conflict present between the Walls family and where they live at any given moment. The Walls family, not having a lot, are forced to adapt to the less than ideal situations wherever Rex would take them. While they are at Battle Mountain, there were excess animals there and Rose Mary, “refused to kill the flies that always filled the house; she said they were nature’s food for the birds and lizards” (Walls 64). The Walls family face external conflicts with where they are located.
Thirteen stripes and fifty stars were assembled to symbolize a land of the free. Symbols tend to have immenseful impacts on the lives of those they relate to. As for Jeannette Walls and her family, prominent motifs, namely the Glass Castle, New York City and a Joshua tree implicate strong faith in her father, rising up from vast dysfunction and a rebirth for not only herself, but her siblings as well. In her highly acclaimed memoir The Glass Castle, Jeannette Walls utilizes striking symbols to hook her readers as they immerse themselves in the convoluted chaos that is the Walls family journey.
b) This play has several strong themes. Identify one of them. How does the symbol of the house contribute to the theme? Support your answer with two references to the play.
Each symbol represents something bigger in the whole scheme of things. The mansion that the girls are first sent to is a cold and dreary place to the children. Byatt describes the mansion as cold and dark. This is because of war time in England and they are tying to not be obvious. This dreariness only helps the symbol of the mansion to represent what is going on at that time. The house is a representation of the “State.” That being the government and everything that is part of the security it provides. There is a sense of security in a way that the mansion is used. The government commandeered the mansion for use as a safe house, although there still is a feeling of doubt about it. To the girls and other children, the mansion is a place of security or home until they move on. This is most likely not what the girls had in mind when they arrived. For them to feel any sort of comfort in this time of tragedy, they will need to stick together and make the best of the situation. The girls seemed to be thinking the worst of every event but at the mansion, things were taken care of to the best of the ability of the adults there to care for them.