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Death In Cormac Mccarthy's The Road

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Oftentimes one’s own outlook on life changes when they know that their life will soon end. In Cormac McCarthy’s post-apocalyptic novel, The Road, the characters struggle to keep moving forward in their final days of living. The mother, father and the son deal with catastrophe in contrasting ways, but ultimately they must each face death. In McCarthy’s post-apocalyptic world, each character must deal with the knowledge there is no future, in their own ways. The mother in particul must deal with this issue.Given only through flashbacks and memories, McCarthy does not give the reader much information about the mother.Tired of running from death and waiting for it to catch up to her, the mother and the father argue about the wife deciding to …show more content…

While more positive about surviving, he wants to give up sometimes too, but the love of his father keeps him wanting to live. Though constantly scared of what might happen to him and his father, the boy represents the only light in the novel. Young and innocent he often sympathizes with everyone he sees on the road, although he has fears. He also cries often, but tells his dad that if “ I shouldn’t cry you shouldn't cry either,”showing that though he is a boy, he must mature in this broken world, more broken than any world a young boy should live in (270). He sees the world through a different lense than the rest of the characters. Both the boy and the world are filled with uncertainty. Asking many questions like if his father lies about their near death experiences or asking ‘what is the bravest thing (he) ever did?” to which his father replies “ getting up this morning”(272). Uncertain of the world yet certain of his fate, born into this world he had a different outlook on his life, though he knew he would eventually die. When things get bad the boy has the mindset that though “ a lot of bad things have happened” they were “ still here”(269). This helped him cope with the fact that he knew that the road has a dead end. The father believes that “ goodness will find the little boy. It always has. It will again,” and towards the end of the novel, the boy finds the good that he needs, before he would leave this world (281). McCarthy shows in his novel the Road how one’s experiences mold their reactions, and help the individual find the things worth living or dying for. Whether it be struggle, compassion, or love, the reader must decide for themselves what is worth living for. Though we may approach death differently, we are made human, when we all come together to accept the same

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