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The Significance of the Rape Scene in Timothy Findley’s the Wars

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The significance of the rape scene in Timothy Findley’s The Wars Ryan Moore

Robert Ross, the protagonist of Timothy Findley’s novel The Wars undergoes a disturbing violation when his fellow soldiers rape him; this is a significant turning point for Robert’s character and a section of the book Findley uses to address many themes. Throughout the book we witness Robert maturing and experiencing many hardships that will help create the man he becomes. The most significant of these trials is the scene at the insane asylum because it is where Robert looses the last connection to his innocence and his faith in humanity’s virtuousness. Findley also uses this scene to address the topic of homophobia in that era, and …show more content…

When he receives his belongings and sees the photograph of his sister, Robert realizes that he doesn’t her memory to exist in a place that has treated him so harshly and that her innocence does not belong in this world any longer. Robert decides to burn the picture to free Rowena’s memory from the slightest association with the depravation mankind has sunk to in his eyes, and with it he is destroying the last link to his innocence.

The rape scene is also very important because of the real life symbolism it represents. Findley uses the rape scene to acknowledge that the war has “raped” Robert’s generation of men who were affiliated with it. As Robert is assaulted his thoughts lead to “Why? Robert kept thinking. Why?” (174). The author hints at this theme in the following line: “ . . . four hundred thousand possibilities- all of those lives that would never be” (169). Robert’s thoughts of “why” reflect the thoughts of many North American men and women who had lost love ones during the war. Findley believes that “the war, and those who made it, raped Robert’s entire generation of men” and left damaged scared victims and grieving relatives in their wake (gradesaver). Findley cleverly emphasizes the subtle metaphor of “four hundred thousand

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