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Comparing Sleeping In The Forest And Little Red Hood

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A part of an individuals identity is defined by their surroundings. The interchanges that take place within a space can be helpful or harmful to an individual. Mary Oliver’s “Sleeping in the Forest” suggests that the relationship an individual has with the environment is beneficial to the human body. Whereas, Lower Lusatia’s “Little Red Hood” demonstrates how an external landscape can be harmful to an individual. Both characters in “Sleeping in the Forest” and “Little Red Hood” see the beauty of nature, gain a sense of belonging, and are reborn. It depends on how an individual becomes connected to an external landscape that determines how they will be effected by it. The poem “Sleeping in the Forest” brings attention to the importance of …show more content…
The individual begins to realize how there are many “small kingdoms” at work (Oliver 12). The ecosystems within the forest all have “their own needs, claims and actions” (Alaimo 2). “Sleeping in the Forest” proposes that the forest “needs” individuals to pay attention to it (Alaimo 2). The forest is a place where the individual feels like there is “nothing between [them] and the white fire of the stars” (Oliver 7-8). Thus, “Sleeping in the Forest” proposes that the relationship an individual has with the natural environment is a rewarding …show more content…
The relationship the individual forms in “Sleeping in the Forest” is portrayed as rewarding, as the they are able to learn more about themselves. In the beginning of “Sleeping in the Forest” the individual expresses “I thought the earth / remembered me, she / took me back so tenderly” (Oliver 1-3). The earth “tenderly” taking the individual suggests that they will not be harmed by the natural world (Oliver 3). “Sleeping in the Forest” is depicting the natural environment as a space that can make an individual feel

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