Wednesday, March 27, 2019

Comparing Fire and Ice, Soldiers Home, The Jilting of Granny Weatheral

Lessons from brace and Ice, Soldiers Home, The Jilting of Granny Weatherall, and Sunday Morning Grasping for stability on the face of a chaotic universe, modernist writers believed that the traditional assumptions about family, war, society, and religion were no longer valid. Before, during, and after World War I, the modernists displayed the influences of scientific revolutions, familial upheaval, societal reform, and philosophical questions. Religion was particularly decimated by the ravages of questioning. This central motivating broker of not only the United States, but the entire area, was intensely scrutinized and frequently abandoned by the modernists, and criticism, abandonment, and reconstruction of religion are evident in selected works of Robert Frost, Ernest Hemingway, Katherine Anne Porter, and Wallace Stevens. Frost flippantly scoffs at doomsday predictions in harass and Ice. In contrast to Frosts assertion of the power of the individual against scientific predic tion and religious prophecy, Harold Krebs folds under his familys religious pressure in Hemingways Soldier Home. alienate from both her family and society, Granny Weatherall tries to use Roman Catholicism as a ticket to Heaven in Porters The Jilting of Granny Weatherall, but she realizes the pointlessness of this terminal on her deathbed. As a culmination of the underlying implications of modernist thought, Wallace Stevens embraces a untested religious order in Sunday Morning. As opposed to a transcendent and unseeable yearning for the afterlife, Modernism presents the option of a bleak faith in the power of natural and secular reality.In a few succinct and profound lines, Robert Frost alludes to two predominant theories of world destruction in Fire... ... and Ice, Soldiers Home, The Jilting of Granny Weatherall, and Sunday Morning, for the relevance of the these works has not diminished over time. With profound insight and acute introspection, the modernists urge the referee to question the validity of traditional religion, and their disillusioned, alienated, and experimental voices do not solace the individual into complacency and stagnation. Unsettled and possibly uprooted, a reader mustiness then reevaluate his or her own spiritual odyssey.Works CitedFrost, Robert. Fire and Ice. McQuade 2 1256.Hemingway, Ernest. Soldiers Home. McQuade 2 1159-63.McQuade, Donald, et al. ed. The Harper American Literature. 2nd ed. 2 vols. freshly York Harper Collins, 1993.Porter, Katherine Anne. The Jilting of Granny Weatherall. McQuade 2 1056-62Stevens, Wallace. Sunday Morning. McQuade 2 1273-76.

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