My Antonia Journal Reading Journal Introduction: To me, the character of Jim Burden seems to be a odd. Although he appears to be childhood friends with the narrator, there is still misunderstandings between them. For example, Jim wrote a whole book instead of just bring notes. I can infer that Jim had a deeper relation with Antonia than the narrator did. The relationship that Jim has with is wife is also strange. Genevieve appears to just be using Jim to gain the title of married. There is no reason for her to marry him, and the narrator never mentioned any love between them. However, I do admire some of Jim’s attributes. I am fond of his adventurous personality. I do find it ironic that a lawyer is a bold adventurer, for lawyer are normally boring and heavily into reading the laws. It will be interesting to see what Jim think of Antonia; since he changed the title to my Antonia like he owns her. Book 1 The Shimerdas: I feel like the whole book is going to be a symbol of Pavel’s story. In the story, the group started out merry and happy, but as the story when on the wolfs preyed on each sled one by one. Jim alludes to this concept as he talks of hiring his three horse sled through the snow. The wolves were symbolic of winter, sickness, and death. Slowly, Pavel died. Then, Peter left to work somewhere where he …show more content…
She works hard not only to survive, but also to make sure that her children have every opportunity to become successful. Antonia talks about how other people are or are not giving their children a good opportunity to succeed. Growing up in a very poor environment with a dead father, she just wanted to provide her kids with a chance to be prosperous. That would be the reason that she chose to marry a successful man that would teach her children to be prosperous. That would be why she chose not to marry Jim and go into a big
In chapter X of My Antonia, there is a conflict between Mrs. Harling and Antonia. Antonia is seen trying to find another job with another group of family because she was told by Mrs. Harling that she should stop going to dances. Antonia was furious about this and decided to leave this job in search for another. She states, “A girl like me has got to take her good times when she can. Maybe there won’t be any tent next year, I guess I want to have my fling, like the other girls.” This particular passage tells the reader that Antonia is searching for her own independence and she will do anything to seek it.
Willa Cather’s My Antonia and Mary Austin’s The Land of Little Rain are two literary works that effectively recreate the landscape of the stories they are telling. Their writing styles have a few similar characteristics, such as their word choice and their usage of visual elements; however, they take advantage of various writing elements that make their writing styles distinct, such as the use of figurative language, emotion, and rhetorical questioning.
The central narrative of My Antonia could be a check upon the interests, and tho' in his fib Jim seldom says something directly concerning the concept of the past, the general tone of the novel is very unhappy. Jim’s motive for writing his story is to do to change some association between his gift as a high-powered any professional person and his nonexistent past on the NE grassland ; in re-creating that past, the novel represent each Jim’s retention and his feelings concerning his recollections. in addition, inside the narrative itself, persona usually look rachis yearningly toward the past that they need losing, particularly when Book I. Life in blackness Hawk, Jim and Ántonia recall their Day on the farm Lena appearance back toward her spirit together with her family; the Shimerdas and therefore the Russian mirror on their lives in their several home countries before they immigrated to the United Country .
Willa Cather’s My Ántonia has been considered by some to be a transitional work for Cather in that, beginning with this novel, she stops creating strong female characters and moves more into a masculine realm. Deborah Lambert expresses this opinion in her article “The Defeat of a Hero: Autonomy and Sexuality in My Ántonia.” Lambert claims that Cather abandons women in her later novels and focuses exclusively on “patriarchal institutions and predominantly male characters” (680). This transition is demonstrated in My Ántonia by the fact that Ántonia is not portrayed through a woman’s eyes, but rather through Jim, a male narrator. Another factor is that she is all but absent from the latter half of the novel as an active character. Also,
Why do many immigrants make the long and usually costly move to America? Is it the largely idolized notion that Americans are wealthier with better opportunities? Moreover, is the price some pay worth the risk? In Willa Cather’s My Ántonia, Ántonia faces struggles as a young child, including language barriers, poverty, harsh living conditions, and her beloved father’s death. However, as Ántonia grows into a woman, she must face struggles of a social nature, such as the division of social and economic classes, as well as social opprobrium. While immigration to America may open many doors for immigrants, it is equally fraught with obstacles. Likewise, Ántonia must face many adversities after her emigration from Bohemia to Nebraska, which
In my writing assignment I chose two of the essay questions about the novel “My Antonia” by Willa Cather. I chose question number three and question number four to write my essay. And question number three the author uses symbols from nature to express essential aspects of the lives of the characters. I chose three symbols and discussed how they convey information about the daily lives of the characters, and how the characters relate to each other and how the author views life. The fourth question that I chose to write about is how the author admires the character, Antonia. I wrote about the three characteristics that the author admires and added quotes from the book and also the reading about the author.
He is a confidante because he helps Jim. Josiah Burden is Jim’s grandfather. He is an extremely religious man and an extremely hard worker. He is telling in the novel because the author tells us about him. He is flat in the novel because he does not evolve.
Throughout My Antonia, the difference between immigrants and native lifestyles are shown. While neither Jim not Antonia is rich, Jim is definitely more well off than her. He knows the language and has enough that he can have more opportunities. Antonia realizes that her life is going to be more difficult and that she will have to work more because of her mother’s decision to move to America. She tells Jim that “if I live here, like you, that is different. Things will be easy for you. But they will be hard for us,” (90) and knows that her gentle personality might be at stake. This also foreshadows future events where Antonia struggles as an immigrant farmer. It adds obstacles to her life which might lead to them drifting apart in their friendship, even complete separation. This relates to the world in how immigrants had a harder time getting going in life. Antonia’s mother has already become changed because of poverty. She is grasping, selfish, and believes everyone should help her family. Jim’s grandmother defends her, knowing that, “a body never knows what traits poverty might bring out in them,” (60), though it is socially unacceptable. The pressures of helping her family led Antonia to not be educated and become a farmer. She is happy, but this leads to Jim being away, “twenty years before I kept my promise,” (211) as he is a successful lawyer and travels. They still have old connections, though being from Bohemia did change Antonia’s life and where it could have gone.
The story is told from Jim’s perspective throughout the entire book. With only his point of view, the book tells only half of the story. Because only Jim’s thoughts are know, it limits the theme to be in only his point of view.
Antonia is seen as a cheerful and ecstatic girl who loves to be around people, as she is also a reason that the landscape relates to the characters in the novel. “As Antonia said, the whole world was changed by the snow. (33)” When Jim leaves for New York, Antonia changes and becomes a different person, reflecting herself as the changes in season and how people
My Antonia is a philosophical story, with dream-like ideas left and right. Even so, the book’s main theme was clearly the transition or journey from childhood to adulthood. This theme applied to both the main characters, Jim and Antonia, who were children when the story begins and adults when it ends. At ten years old, Jim Burden moved to the plains of Black Hawk, Nebraska. His parents had died in an epidemic, and Jim was sent to live with his father’s parents on their Nebraska farm. In his new home, he met a Bohemian girl named Antonia, a free-spirited, lively, unique personality. He fell in love with her, and although his feelings were not returned, he and Antonia became great friends. The book has numerous examples of traditional obstacles that people their ages go through, along with additional hardships such as poverty and death of close family members. Antonia developed a sense of independence that became her most prominent trait throughout the book. The characters found activities and places where they felt like they belonged, and they began to discover who they were. As Jim (the narrator) states, “The new country lay open before me: there were no fences in those days, and I could choose my own way over the grass uplands, trusting the pony to get me home again.” Jim was speaking of a place
Literary pieces are frequently linked to historical trends to enhance and strengthen their rhetoric. Accordingly, this is the case of My Ántonia, a book written by the American novelist Willa Cather. Historical events can easily be associated with the book’s main theme by examining the religious aspects of the setting, the conflicts rooted in ethnic backgrounds due to nativist sentiments, and the freedom that the Midwest prairie presented for European immigrants.
Antonia knows the struggle firsthand since she has faced the harsh conditions of starting off in a new country since she is a Shimerda. Antonia tells Jim,“’ If I live here, like you, that is different. Things will be easy for you. But they will be hard for us’” (Cather 90). Antonia knows the racial difference between her and Jim. She has to work harder than the native speakers to be able to achieve what might come easily to them. Later on in the novel, Antonia goes off with a guy named Larry Donovan he informs her that his job has moved. This ended up being a lie. He leaves her whilst she's pregnant, so she becomes a single mom. Jim expresses his thoughts, “I was bitterly disappointed in her [Ántonia]. I could not forgive her for becoming an object of pity” (Cather 192). Jim expresses his dismay that Antonia has basically ruined her life by putting faith into a man of words. Antonia’s reputation fell drastically after this and it appears as though it would be hard to pick up. However, when Jim returns, he ends up being wrong. In the literary criticism, Anthony M. Dykema-VanderArk states, “She appears at the end of My Antonia as a figure who has triumphed over the hardships of her life through stalwart struggle...ensuring an easier future for her children” (Dykema-VanderArk 211). Antonia has gone through a lot throughout her life. Her father’s death to ruining her reputation by being oblivious. Her race caused her to be inferior compared to the women that don't have to work in order to survive, but she still gives a good life to her children. Despite her hardships, she still kept to her strong attitude and doesn't sway away from it. That's success through the work she put
Antonia, despite having an enormous warmth about her, is too simpleminded and preoccupied with manual labor in order to have time to reflect on the meaning of happiness; nevertheless, she is always dissolved in the moment which allows her to unconsciously live by Jim's definition of happiness. She often finds herself completely submerged in her joys which predominantly come in form of her work, personal freedoms, and family. She said once, "'I belong on a farm. I'm never lonesome here like I used to be in town... And I don't mind work a bit if I don't have to put up with sadness'"(Book 5, Section1). Here it is evident that her work on the farm allows Antonia to forget her troubles and keep her from being lost in her negative thoughts. She was also found bragging to Jim about the
It makes the story more realistic due to the fact of how Jim’s interprets the American reality for others, while seeing being able to work for his American Dream. The best description of Jim’s life can be read when Antonia says, “If I live here, like you, that is different. Things will be easy for you. But they will be hard for us.” Antonia is able to tell Jim that due to their social circumstances, how different their lives are from each other’s.