Thursday, January 23, 2020
The Story Of Sweetheart Of The Song Of Tra Bong: The Use Of Setting :: essays research papers
 The Story of Sweetheart of the Song of Tra Bong: The Use of Setting           Where does the story of Sweetheart of the Song Tra Bong take place?  Upon reading the story, one would first assume that it takes place in Vietnam.  Upon further examination, however, it becomes quite evident that it really takes  place inside Rat Kiley's head. This isn't to declare the story false; instead,  one should examine the influence and literary freedom that Rat flexes upon the  truth. "For Rat Kileyâ⬠¦ facts were formed by sensation, not the other way  around." (101) The story occurs in two separate but equally chaotic places:  Vietnam, and Rat's head. The story intertwines between the two settings, and in  order to completely grasp the idea behind them, one must first recognize, then  separate and analyze the two settings.       Upon the first reading of this work, the reader finds himself dropping  into the story of a seemingly misplaced girl in Vietnam. The role of Rat Kiley  seems somewhat minor and irrelevant. Upon the second and third times through,  however, his role as the storyteller stands out. It becomes more evident that  he holds Mary Anne with the highest regard. He romanticizes her relationship  with the war. He is so amazed with the fact that a girl can be seduced by the  lure of the wilderness that he begins to talk about her with the listeners as if  she were the attractive girl from school that everyone knows but nobody dates.  " 'You knowâ⬠¦I loved her. Mary Anne made you think about those girls back home,  how clean and innocent they all are.' " (123) Rat is pushing his views upon  the listener. He is shaping how the story is seen. The reader sees "triple-  canopied jungle, mountains unfolding into higher mountains, ravines and gorges  and fast-moving rivers and waterfalls and exotic butterflies and steep cliffs  and smoky little hamlets and great valleys of bamboo and elephant grass." (103)  The actual reality of the situation is added by the narrator, as extrapolated  from Rat: that they were in an almost completely indefensible situation. Had  somebody cared enough to take control of the little base, there would be no  resistance. Rat wanted to let the reader know his opinion on the citizens of  the Viet Cong, how he wants the listener to think of them. "Mary Anne asked,  'They're human beings, aren't they? Like everybody else?' Fossie nodded. He  loved her." (107) Rat lets us know that he thinks the VC are less then human.  Why did Fossie nod, in Rat's opinion? Not because he thought Fossie felt she was    					  The Story Of Sweetheart Of The Song Of Tra Bong: The Use Of Setting  ::  essays research papers   The Story of Sweetheart of the Song of Tra Bong: The Use of Setting           Where does the story of Sweetheart of the Song Tra Bong take place?  Upon reading the story, one would first assume that it takes place in Vietnam.  Upon further examination, however, it becomes quite evident that it really takes  place inside Rat Kiley's head. This isn't to declare the story false; instead,  one should examine the influence and literary freedom that Rat flexes upon the  truth. "For Rat Kileyâ⬠¦ facts were formed by sensation, not the other way  around." (101) The story occurs in two separate but equally chaotic places:  Vietnam, and Rat's head. The story intertwines between the two settings, and in  order to completely grasp the idea behind them, one must first recognize, then  separate and analyze the two settings.       Upon the first reading of this work, the reader finds himself dropping  into the story of a seemingly misplaced girl in Vietnam. The role of Rat Kiley  seems somewhat minor and irrelevant. Upon the second and third times through,  however, his role as the storyteller stands out. It becomes more evident that  he holds Mary Anne with the highest regard. He romanticizes her relationship  with the war. He is so amazed with the fact that a girl can be seduced by the  lure of the wilderness that he begins to talk about her with the listeners as if  she were the attractive girl from school that everyone knows but nobody dates.  " 'You knowâ⬠¦I loved her. Mary Anne made you think about those girls back home,  how clean and innocent they all are.' " (123) Rat is pushing his views upon  the listener. He is shaping how the story is seen. The reader sees "triple-  canopied jungle, mountains unfolding into higher mountains, ravines and gorges  and fast-moving rivers and waterfalls and exotic butterflies and steep cliffs  and smoky little hamlets and great valleys of bamboo and elephant grass." (103)  The actual reality of the situation is added by the narrator, as extrapolated  from Rat: that they were in an almost completely indefensible situation. Had  somebody cared enough to take control of the little base, there would be no  resistance. Rat wanted to let the reader know his opinion on the citizens of  the Viet Cong, how he wants the listener to think of them. "Mary Anne asked,  'They're human beings, aren't they? Like everybody else?' Fossie nodded. He  loved her." (107) Rat lets us know that he thinks the VC are less then human.  Why did Fossie nod, in Rat's opinion? Not because he thought Fossie felt she was    					    
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