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How Did General Zaroff's Attitude Change In The Most Dangerous Game

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People have experiences that cause changes in their views. In the short story “The Most Dangerous Game” General Zaroff’s view was changed through his experiences. General Zaroff’s views changed about how he saw himself, Sanger Rainsford, the setting and the conflict, the hunt, because of his experiences. The way a character sees themself can affect the point of view of a story. In the beginning, General Zaroff felt that he was a skilled and successful hunter. He felt that hunting was his passion and chose to pursue it his entire life. He had been hunting since the age of five, when he killed his father's prized turkey with his first pistol. Since then, he had hunted much larger game. Zaroff’s skills and success in his previous hunts was …show more content…

Through the story, General Zaroff had changes in his view of Sanger Rainsford. in the beginning, Zaroff saw Rainsford as a fellow hunter. He showed hospitality by providing Rainsford with shelter and high standard accommodations such as lavish clothing and a large bed. He also treated him to fine cuisine and expensive wine. General Zaroff showed he viewed Rainsford as a fellow hunter when they talked about previous hunts. In that conversation the General illustrated the characteristics of his new hunting quarry. Zaroff explained to Rainsford how he saw the sailors and crewmen as inferior to him, therefore he felt no pity for them. He explained to Rainsford expecting him to see the way he did, as a hunter. Midway through the story Zaroff began to see Rainsford as an adversary. The General wanted to be faced with a challenge when hunting Rainsford. When he tracked Rainsford to the tree he was hiding in, Zaroff felt that taking Rainsford would have been too easy so he left him for another day’s sport. Near the end of the story, Zaroff continued to see Rainsford is an adversary. The General came to see Rainsford as a formidable opponent. When Zaroff faced Rainsford in his bedroom he had to realize that Rainsford was presenting him with the danger he sought. The General’s view of Rainsford changed from seeing Rainsford as a fellow hunter to seeing him as an opponent he could not defeat. The story concludes with the …show more content…

Zaroff’s views of himself as a skilled and successful hunter changed by the end of the story. Zaroff’s view of himself as a skilled and successful hunter changed by the end of the story. in the beginning Zaroff saw himself as a skilled and successful hunter. By the end of the story, Zaroff still saw himself as skilled and successful but he saw his skills and success as inferior to Rainsford's. The General's view of Rainsford also changed near the end of the story. Initially zaroff's all the Rainsford as a friend and a fellow hunter. Midway through the story, on the hunt, Zaroff changed his view of Rainsford from a fellow hunter to an adversary. At the end of the story, Zaroff continued to see Rainsford as an adversary but he saw him as an adversary he can not defeat. As well as his view of Rainsford, General Zaroff's view of the setting changed by the end of the story. Beginning the story, Zaroff saw the setting, the island, as a safe place with a positive atmosphere. By the end of the story, Zaroff’s view changed because, to him, the setting can no longer be considered safe or hold a positive atmosphere. The last place in which Zaroff changed his views is towards the conflict. The initial conflict Zaroff faced was avoiding boredom while hunting. His conflict changed from avoiding boredom to survival in his duel with Rainsford. General Zaroff’s experiences throughout the story

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