A quote from The Perks of Being a Wallflower states, “Things change and friends leave. Life doesn’t stop for anyone…” The setting of this book is school, a place where students should feel safe and protected. However this is not the case for most students attending school. Division from groups in schools are causing a social monarchy to form inside the school. Everyone wants to get to the top of the social ladder. Unfortunately not everyone can be at the top, causing a division between the groups. The outcasts are affected the most by this social division, they can't find a group to fit into. This group of people are called the Wallflowers, people know they are their but no one acknowledges them, or makes them feel welcome. Victims of social
High school is filled with fake people and stress. Students in high school often do not know what they are doing in relationships or how bad they can hurt another person. Lying, cheating, little communication, getting used for sex, drugs, or alcohol and what people continue to believe is real love. It is even harder while trying to make the people around you ecstatic and please your boyfriend/girlfriend. Navigating through the paroles of adolescents with someone that is guaranteed to break your heart in some way, shape, or form is laborious. In Stephen Chbosky’s The Perks of Being a Wallflower, the main character Charlie has to navigate all of this while trying to maintain new friendships, try new things, and find new relationships. As presented in the book Charlie is a wallflower. A wallflower is typically an introverted person. They might attend social gatherings, but will continue to remain silent. They see and understand. They feel lonely or shy all the time. As if no one ever see’s them. Also only have a few friends, just like Charlie. His 2 friends are Sam and Patrick. Patrick’s a senior, introducing Charlie to new people, new relationships, and giving him the whole high school experience. They all have something in common, they’re all involved foul relationships. Charlie and Mary Elizabeth, Brad and Patrick, and Sam and Craig. Chbosky displays insolent relationships throughout the book using young adolescent relationships in Perks that are unfair because the people in
Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky follows a teenage boy, Charlie, and those around him as they reveal their past to justify their present actions and feelings. As the characters all mature they learn that people cannot control where they come from or what has happened to them, but they can control what they become.
The Perks of Being a Wallflower is a banned book because of profanity, sexual references, drugs, drinking, smoking, and suicide. Profanity is used often in the book in many different circumstances. Two examples of this was when Brad, Patricks boyfriend, called Patrick a faggot to seem cool, and when Charlie’s brother called his sister a bitch. The whole book also mentions sexual references such as having sex, masturbation, and rape. Charlie mentions in one of his first few letters that he had been in the same room as someone being raped.
“The Perks of Being a Wallflower”, written and directed by Stephen Chbosky, is a coming-of-age book and movie about deep feelings and the pains of growing up. It is narrated by the main character, Charlie, who struggles socially and mentally throughout his life and more prominently, throughout his first year of high school. Along the way, Charlie slowly seems to grow out of his reclusive nature and manages to befriend two seniors: Patrick and Sam. “The Perks of Being a Wallflower” is strictly a literary film seeing that it unveils the crucial and fragile time where the emotional lives of teenagers are deeply affected by the journey of life along with its trials and tribulations.
Throughout my reading in this class I have noticed quite a few differences between Young Adult Literature authors. Two that have really stood out to me are Markus Zusak, the author of The Book Thief, and Stephen Chbosky, the author of The Perks of Being a Wallflower. The authors have different styles of writing and tend to write about different things, but they both are very good at writing.
“The Perk of Being a Wallflower” follows an awkward 15 year old; Charlie who is writing letters to one of his friends about his experiences and his thoughts. These letters are focused on Charlie’s first year of high school and his coping of the deaths of his best friend michael and his aunt Helen. While trying to adjust to high school he became close to his english teacher who gives Charlie extra assignments not for marks but because charlie is advance in literature. After a few weeks of beginning school Charlie approached Patrick and Sam who later becomes his closest friends. Patrick and Sam took Charlie under their wing and helped him through the school year.
We defined and described depression in The Perks of Being a Wallflower, but it is often thought by people to have been exaggerated. However, many people have suffered from depression and it’s important to know how it affects people in real life. Deacon Ph.D. (2015) is a retired mental health nurse who suffers from depression and in her article, “Personal Experience: Being Depressed Is Worse than Having Advanced Cancer,” she exclaims her pains which, “include exhaustion, self‐loathing, anxiety and panic, a feeling of emptiness, horrid agitation and all the physical experiences that go alongside those states, like dizziness and tremor,” these affected her in her work, social and family life (Deacon, 2015). Her depression showed itself in a physical
“We accept the love we think we deserve”(Chbosky). This quotation from “The Perks of Being a Wallflower” shows how Charlie put up with people pushing him around. Over the course of the novel Charlie has been convinced by everyone around him that he is different. Due to a childhood trauma unbeknownst to everyone, Charlie was subconsciously changed. Most everyone has made it seem to Charlie that being different was a bad thing.
The first heartbreak I ever had was not even one of my own. I let words and sentences from a love story run through my blood, and to my heart, where it then cracked, fell apart, and possibly stopped beating for a while. I laid in bed for days. Perks of Being a Wallflower, why did you do this to me? I realized everyone has their own personality when it comes to reading. My reading disposition holds a deep sense of empathy. Because of this, in every story I read, I transform into any character I (sometimes) choose to be. I then experience the story more heavily since I am apart of it. I have learned that the trait of empathy can send you down a tunnel of agonizing pain that does not even belong to you, or it can put you on someone else’s
Passivity in The Perks of Being a Wallflower There are many life lessons to learn from in Stephen Chbosky’s, “The Perks of Being a Wallflower”. One of them being, “Do as you wish. Be as you are”. Charlie, the protagonist of the novel, is a high school freshman just trying to fit in. Throughout the novel he is faced with many difficulties as a teenager.
Within The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky, subtle criticism is brought to the changes in education that occurred in the 1990s. According
Stephen Chbosky’s The Perks of Being a Wallflower demonstrates how ‘Charlie’, the protagonist drives the narrative through his subconscious exploration of his own mother complex and masculine worth. He analyses his past and current personality in his letters to arrive at how his current attitudes, values and beliefs have been shaped through key events that have happened. As the story develops, it is clearly demonstrated through Charlies exploration that Chbosky utilises the theory of Freudian psycho-analytical criticism and masculine theory. The Perks of Being a Wallflower is an American coming of age text; the protagonist, Charlie is starting the journey of high school. Charlie is a socially awkward boy who as the title says; is a wallflower.
I am focusing on the work of Grayson Perry, to help me fully explore the question, in his work Perry powerfully uses vibrant colours, intricate compositions, with a variety of styles, all of these factors help Perry depict the narrative which inspired him. 2003 Turner Prize winner Grayson Perry uses his artwork, ceramics, tapestries and other forms, to make witty, thought provoking and dynamic comments about the way modern life is, taking apart individual societal injustices and hypocrisies to explore his opinion on many contentious aspects of contemporary being. Middle class angst, religious snobbery and attitudes towards minorities are some of the topics evaluated in Perry's work. Fascinated with the subject of identity, Perry uses comedy,
“Every life is narrow .Our only escape is not to run away, but to learn to love the people we are and the world in which we find oversleeves”-Mark Haddon. The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky is a story that describes a difficult time for many people specifically high school. Individuals of all age have struggled with fitting in and finding their place in high school , which in this book becomes an issue for characters. In the novel characters manage to find themselves engaging in both negative and positive methods of escape, for instance drug use, reading, writing, and or through suppressing thoughts.All these different methods touch on issues that many teens have explored in their own lives whether directly or indirectly.
Homework can be a valuable learning tool to help students retain information. It allows them to go in depth exploring subjects they find interesting. However, excessive amounts of homework can cause students unnecessary stress and actually be counterproductive, turning them away from subjects they might otherwise enjoy. In the novel, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, by Stephen Chbosky, the author believes homework that engages students can spark their interest in a subject. Charlie Kelmeckis, a freshman student, tries to find his place in high school after being burdened with the suicide of his only friend, and being labeled as an outcast due to his shyness.