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Symbolism In The Glass Castle By Jeannette Walls

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In the memoir, The Glass Castle, it was evident the Glass Castle was not just a physical object itself, but holds a deeper meaning of symbolism towards the author, Jeannette Walls. After completing the book, it has been noted that the Glass Castle symbolizes the constant reminder of Jeannette’s hope that one day both her family and house will be in a stable, working position. Throughout the novel, the Glass Castle was vaguely mentioned as the Walls family continued their journey through the United States. However, through their ongoing journey, Jeannette’s view of the Glass Castle changed, as it was inevitably just a vision that her father had implanted in her brain but never actually built in reality.
In the beginning of the novel, when Jeannette was just a child, the Glass Castle was first …show more content…

According to Jeannette, “all of Dad’s engineering skills and mathematical genius were coming together in one special project: a great big house he was going to build for us in the desert” (Walls 25). Notice how Jeannette describes the Glass Castle as a great, big house instead of simply stating her father was planning on building her family a more ‘improved shelter.’ As a child, Jeannette saw this Glass Castle as not just an average house, but a mansion for the whole family to thrive in. Towards the middle of the book, the Glass Castle was once again mentioned and was still a plausible idea in Jeannette’s mind. Even so much that she and her brother Brian attempted to dig a hole in their backyard as the foundation for the Glass Castle. Despite their efforts, “the hole for the Glass Castle’s foundation slowly filled with garbage” (Walls 155). And, as it continued to become a home for the Walls’ throwaways, the probability of the Glass

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