Wednesday, April 8, 2020
A Seperate Piece Essays - Phillips Exeter Academy, A Separate Peace
A Seperate Piece Essays - Phillips Exeter Academy, A Separate Peace    A Seperate Piece      A Separate Peace - Gene's Journey  Gene Forrester's difficult journey towards maturity and the adult   world is a main focus of the novel, A Separate Peace, by John Knowles.   Gene's journey begins the moment he pushes Phineas from the tree and   the process continues until he visits the tree fifteen years later.   Throughout this time, Gene must become self-aware, face reality and   the future, confront his problems, as well as forgive and accept the   person that he is. With the jouncing of the limb, Gene realizes his   problems and the true person he is inside. Fifteen years later, when   revisiting the tree, he finally accepts and forgives himself. This   journey is a long and painful one. At the end of this long and winding   road filled with ditches, difficulties and problems, Gene emerges a   mature adult.  Gene jounces the limb and causes Finny's fall and at that moment   becomes aware of his inner-self and learns of his true feelings. This   revelation comes to him back in his room before he and Finny leave for   the tree. It surrounds him with the shock of his true self until he   finally reacts by jouncing the limb. Up in the tree, before the two   friends are about to make their double-jump, Gene sees Finny in this   new light. He realizes that Finny feels no jealousy or hatred towards   him and that Finny is indeed perfect in every way. Gene becomes aware   that only he is the jealous one. He learns of his animosity and that   he really is a savage underneath. Over a long period of time Gene   had been denying his feelings of hatred towards Finny, saying that it   was normal for him to feel this way. Now all of the feelings come back   to him and he sees how terrible he really is. The realization that   these feelings are one-sided causes Gene to to fall dramatically in   comparison to Finny (he paints himself black for these feelings and  because Finny doesn't share them, he puts a halo around Finny's head),   concludes with the neccessity for Finny to be brought down to his   level, and results with Gene jouncing the limb.   After the realization of the person he truly is, in his room and   up in the tree, Gene must now confront his problems, face reality,  and deal with the future. He must learn that communication is very   important in a relationship and that he must express himself instead   of keeping his feelings inside, as he had always done with Finny. He   must learn to listen to himself rather than to others. These were just   a few of the many problems there were in his relationship with Finny.   He must face reality and acknowledge the fact that he isn't as great   as Finny, that he is his own individual person and that Finny isn't as   perfect as he thought. Gene must accept the guilt for Finny's   difficulties after his injury and must help Finny as a punishment and   act of repentence for his deed. Gene does this by giving a part of   himself to Finny as we see with the case of sports throughout the   rest of the novel - how Gene becomes Finny when it comes to sports.   Although the above are all of great importance, the greatest hurdle   Gene must overcome is learning to live with what he's done. This   painful step is the one which will allow him to completely mature.  The final stage of Gene's maturation is his self-acceptence and   self-forgivness. He has to accept that he isn't perfect and that he,  like any other normal being (even Finny), has faults. Accepting that   his innocence has been lost helps Gene move on into another part of   his life and realize that he can never return to the days of his   innocent youth again. He can now become a man, enter the war and adult   world and leave his youth behind. Forgiving himself is the step which   allows Gene to lead a normal life and enter society. He must finally   forgive himself completely for his blind act and allow himself to   come in out of the rain. By accepting as well as forgiving the   person that he is, Gene enables himself to move on    
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