James Dickey Deliverance Essay

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    In his essay, “Come Back to the Raft Ag’in, Ed Gentry,” Betina Entzminger argues that at the heart of James Dickey’s Deliverance lies the search for a lost masculinity in today’s world, told through the lens of the protagonist’s canoe trip. He asserts that Ed understands the societal pressures upon each gender, forces that compel us towards the stereotypes that pervade our culture. Further, Entzminger believes, “Despite the fact that Ed sees these constructions as constructions, he is unable to rise

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    Deliverance The book that I decided to read was Deliverance by James Dickey. I am very glad that I decided to choose this book. I am sure that Brave New World by Aldous Huxley is also a great book, but I just really enjoyed Deliverance. In this paper I will talk about the book itself and my thoughts on it. Then I will talk about the philosophy in this book and how it relates to some of the ideas that we talked about in this course. Deliverance was an amazing book so I hope to do it justice while

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    Estranged by urban city life and disheartened by debilitating office work, the group in Deliverance face a crisis in masculine identity at the beginning of the narrative. The horror and terror that the group of four goes through shows the loss of control engendered by women’s and homosexual rights movement, which worsened (white heterosexual) masculine doubts about traditional gender roles. In this respect, the choice to return to the wilderness is an endeavor to regain a former masculinity and flee

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    In the civilized world, people always live under the standard of society and morality. However, in some certain circumstances like the matter of live or die, people will re-connect with their instincts and fight for survival. In James Dickey’s novel Deliverance, Ed, Lewis, Bobby and Drew are four city men who decide to have a canoe trip rural area. When the men arrive, they are not welcomed by the backwood locals. The four men not only need to deal with the dangers from the nature, but also need

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    rapists can be examined in terms of the circles of Hell found in Robert Pinsky's translation of "The Inferno of Dante." Each circle of Hell is reserved for a particular type of sinner with very specific punishments. When the characters from James Dickey's "Deliverance" are viewed from the perspective of Dante's nine circles of Hell, their actions seem to be much more sinister then when they are taken in the context of Dickey's novel alone. What could be viewed as justifiable homicide in Dickey's world

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