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Symbolism In Jack London's To Build A Fire

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Introduction "To Build a Fire," is a deplorable short story and film by Jack London. It centers on a man who made a choice to travel and explore Yukon alone. The environments of the place was not good as the temperatures were subfreezing. The forces of nature are not favorable and friendly at all. During his adventure, the man’s feet become wet when he falls into the water of a hot spring through the ice (London 122). Due to the seriousness of the freezing temperatures, exactly "one hundred and seven degrees beneath the point of solidification," the gentleman's life relies on his capacity to expeditiously light a fire to prevent his feet from cold (122-23). After a series of subsequent attempts to fire start, besides a few other forlorn endeavors, the sadness of the man's solitary battle counter the ill-disposed environs of the Yukon starts winding up distinctly …show more content…

London relies vigorously on imagery to establish the mind-set of the story but this is not all that noticeable in the movie, and along these lines he draws an image of the barbarous surroundings his player ought to persevere. The author utilizes top notch imagery in which the audience can practically sense the extremes as well as the destructive chill of nature and can nearly perceive the "sharp, explosive crackle" when the man's saliva would freeze in mid-air (Pizer 222). However, during this scene in the movie did not depict that sharp explosive crackle when he spit. The movie did not display the intenseness of how the book described it. Using such distinctive imagery in the book, London controls the audience in the direction of acknowledgment of the topic of the story; the audience imagines the man’s loss in his fight with the ice and in this way can imagine man in his contention with a merciless and heartless

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