Friday, November 15, 2019
Every Woman Is A Novel :a Jest Of God :: essays research papers
   Rachel often addresses her thoughts to God. How does she imagine Him (Her    or It)? Does Rachel's concept of God change during the course of the    Novel? Explain.        Rachel Cameron, the heroine of "A Jest of God", is not simply as an    individual literary character but as a psychological portrayal of women    of Rachel's time and inclination. Even we can easily find someone who has    the same problem Rachel has in the friends of us, or maybe in an early    morning when we get up; stand at front of the mirror; we will suddenly    have a idea, "I am Rachel too."        She has a common Cameron heritage. She is a gawky, introverted spinster    schoolteacher who has returned home to Manawaka from university in    Winnipeg, upon the death of her alcoholic undertaker father Niall    Cameron, to care for her hypochondriac mother May. Nevertheless, the    family resemblance is obvious: their shared Scots Presbyterian ancestry,    which Laurence views as distinctively Canadian, provides an armour of    pride that imprisons her within their internal worlds, while providing a    defence against the external world. To overcome that barrier between    personalities, she must learn to understand and accept their heritage in    order to liberate her own identities and free herself for the future. She    must also learn to love herself before she can love others. Rachel    receive a sentimental education through a brief love affair: as a result    of learning to empathize with their lovers, she learn to love herself and    the people she lives with. Laurence's emphasis is, as always, on the    importance of love in the sense of compassion, as each of her solipsistic    protagonists develops from claustrophobia to community.    The beginning of "A Jest of God" extends beyond its Canadian perimeters    in Rachel's branching imagination, both into the fairytale dream world    which gives depth and pathos to the disappointment and despair of her    present and out into a wider world in time and space than the grey little    town of Manawaka. The first lines of the novel tell us everything basic    to Rachel's mind, her temperament, and her situation.        The wind blows low, the wind blows high    The snow comes falling from the sky,    Rachel Cameron says she'll die    For the want of the golden city.    She is handsome, she is pretty,    She is the queen of the golden city.        They are not actually chanting my name, of course, I only hear it that    way from where I am watching the classroom window, because I remember    myself skipping rope to that song when I was about the age of the little    girls out there now. Twenty-seven years ago... (p. 1)    The reader is engaged in sympathy with Rachel by the sadness of the gap    					    
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