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Summary Of The Novel 'The Hero's Journey'

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Key Passage Page How is this passage critical to the development of the theme/character/mood/setting/conflict? Respond to the passage on a personal note.
“It was too transitory, all those doorways and dark spaces between wings, the missing ceiling. It was more like a terminal, he thought, a train station or an airport, everyone passing quickly through.” 5 This passage helps develop the novel’s recurring theme of main characters traveling. Firstly, it foreshadows what life will be like after the Georgia Flu. “Everyone passing quickly through” may foreshadow many people’s quick deaths, “passing through” life, but it also may foreshadow the Traveling Symphony’s centrality in the novel. The Traveling Symphony never stays very long in any one place, …show more content…
Readers learn more about Arthur’s character from this passage alone. He did not want to leave his home island because it was unpleasant. In fact, Arthur himself admits that the island was beautiful, but he had to leave because it was too small for him. This wanted more stimulation and excitement than the island could offer, and this manifests itself in his romantic life, as he is unable to be faithful or focus on any one person for very long (e.g. his many relationships and divorces). This detailed imagery about Arthur’s hometown of Delano Island creates a greater contrast between his life before and after moving to Toronto. It helps the reader understand that Arthur did not merely go from a suburban landscape to the urban city of Toronto, but the change between his tranquil life in British Columbia to his chaotic life in Toronto was drastic. “The island is all temperate rain forest and rocky beaches, deer breaking into vegetable gardens and leaping in front of windshields, moss of low-hanging branches, the sighing of wind in cedar trees.” …show more content…
The Traveling Band moves between small towns, which, although seemingly identical, with abandoned buildings and people struggling to survive, all have their own identity and governance (or lack thereof). This is representative of actual Canadian small towns, may seem similar but each a different culture. A small town in the Praries has a different culture from a small town in Northern Ontario, which would have a different culture from a rural community in the Maritimes. “Some towns, as I was saying, some towns are like this one, where they want to talk about what happened, about the past. Other towns, discussion of the past is discouraged. We went to a place once where the children didn’t know the world had ever been different, although you’d think all the rusted-out automobiles and telephone wires would give them a clue. Some towns are easier to visit than others. Some places have elected mayors or they’re run by elected committees. Sometimes a cult takes over, and those towns are the most dangerous.”

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