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A Separate Peace : The Internal Conflict Of Finny With Reality And Disillusionment

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A Separate Peace: The Internal Conflict of Finny with Reality and Disillusionment
Has someone ever been so in denial of what was going on in the world around him that he decides to pretend it is not happening? In the novel A Separate Peace, by John Knowles, Phineas and Gene, two boys who went to The Devon School, struggle with many internal as well as external conflicts. Finny cannot be a part of the war because of his injury, and as a result of that he decides that the war is not happening. He is dealing with an internal conflict of reality and disillusionment. In page ten of the article “Introducing the Novel”, the author states that “... the characters experience conflicts that many readers have found to be absorbing and true to life. If the conflicts seem real, it is because they represent the kinds of inner struggles that everyone experiences”. In the novel, A Separate Peace, by John Knowles, Finny’s internal conflict is developed through him rejecting the fact that the war is real. Before Finny broke his leg, he could tell the difference between reality and disillusionment. For example, he knew that the war was real and that it was currently happening. “‘Well,’ he cried out, ‘here’s my contribution to the war effort!’” (Knowles 4). Finny knew and acknowledged that the war was real. After Finny broke his leg, he eventually confessed to believing that World War II was real. He came back to reality. This is known because in page 103 Finny says, “‘Why do you think I kept

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