Thursday, May 16, 2019

Grotesque Characters

Brittany Luckey Mr. Clements American Literature 21 March 2013 howling(a) Characters What is a wondrous character? In lit, a character or location that is irregular, spendthrift or fantastic in form. When used as a device, the purpose is often in the style of expressionism, reservation the fantastical a parody of human qualities or a distorted reflection of a familiar place. In many another(prenominal) ways ugly characters conduct some kind of problem in society, and framework would be a veteran who lost a limb in war and trying to fit back into society, or anything that we see as not normal in our society.Characters in this particular subject can be deformed, obsessed, or in our terms just not normal or right. Another definition of a fanciful character is characterized by ludicrous or incongruous distortion, as of appearance or manner. Flannery O Connor, Angela Carter, and Carson McCullers all experienced uses with grotesque characters whose works can be seen with characte rs who are deformed, deflower, or social outcasts. What elements wee up grotesque characters? One element of the narrative that is a character can be irregular, extravagant or fantastic in form.A grotesque character may possess a exaggerated spirit trait or characteristic for the purpose of eliciting both empathy and disgust in the reader. In Flannery O Connors stories she uses two different fibres of grotesque characters. One type of characterized grotesque characters are called carnal grotesques and the other type of grotesque is called secular grotesques. Two characters in particular are Mrs. Crater and Mr. Shiftlet they are both grotesque characters, because they are both ruled by irresistible impulse. Mrs. Craters obsession is trying to marry morose her daughter, and fails to see the character flaws of Mr.Shiftlet who cheats and lies. He uses Mrs. Crater for her money, Mr. Shiftlet is obsesses with morality and that makes both these characters grotesque, because their ob session rules their lives. Mrs. Craters obsession is trying to marry off her daughter, and fails to see the character flaws of Mr. Shiftlet who cheats and lies. Mr. Shiftlet is obsesses with morality and that makes both these characters grotesque. (The Life You Save may Be Your Own). Why are grotesque characters so popular in the Modernist movement and the gray Gothic movement?In Southern Gothic literature grotesque characters are used to limn deeply flawed characters. Grotesque characters allow a talented writer to exaggerate their writing making it longer and believing it made their writing better. Grotesque characters can also help with unpleasant aspects deep down society without making it to church-like. McCullers used grotesque characters to bring about the truths of the human society. In the Modernist movement grotesque characters were used to describe the aberration from ideal form, it helped to create mis variantn, ugly, or formless characters.In Modernism they are char acterized by the qualities they lack such as fixity, stability, order, and sometimes even sanity. Writers in this period used grotesque characters to shape the hi written report, practice, and theories in the nineteenth and twentieth centurys. What type of effect does a grotesque character founder on a story? In Angela Carters story (John Bowen par. 1-5) they dominate, they are not beautiful, they tend to be dirtier than they clean. The main characters are Honeybuzzard, Morris, Ghislaine, and Emily. Honeybuzzard is the prettiest, but she is selfish, cruel and a killer.They are used in a swarm of gothic writing to improve, and interest and keep the reader in the book. They affect the book in many ways such as people not wanting to be around them. They normally have problems such as obsession, missing limbs, mental illnesses, or just not right in physical appearance. They stand out from other characters in a story, because of how they look or how they act. They are also cognize as outliers. Grotesque characters face many problems in society or wherever they live, because people assay them for how they look or how they act.How does this story characterization add or cypher from the story? These types of characters give the story a mix of fear, abnormality, and it causes the reader to want to keep reading, and not put the book down. They can subtract from a story by having a book full of grotesque characters and the book becomes less interest to a reader, because there is nothing happening except a group full of deformed and disfigured people. They give a book something to talk about and allow a reader to understand why they have been outcast, or why they have certain obsessions.They bring out some qualities a part of authors dont write about, and that makes the book just that much more entertaining. Who is a good example of supporting grotesque characters? An example from Malcom Griffith about grotesque characters For example, he uses vague guidelines such as the open-ended nature of grotesque without prior explanation of which way the grotesque is open-ended (Griffith 49). What Griffith lacks in cohesion of a definition, he tries to make up for in examples. He breaks down trying to explain what causes a grotesque character, to be open- ended, and why they are different from other characters.Grotesque characters help make literature entertaining and enjoyable to read. They bring out the other side of literature in which characters arent normal. These things show how far literature has come from very different authors. Different types of grotesque characters have very different obsessions, problems, and living situations. Grotesque characters are used a lot and can be found in literature such as Southern Gothic Literature and some Modernism. Grotesque characters shape a lot of our books in literature today. Grotesque add thrills and excitement to our books and other sources of literature.In conclusion, we find grotesque characters t o be unwanted, socially awkward, sometimes helpless, dysfunctional, overall just not what we consider normal in our life. They dont fit in they are just abnormal and freakish. Works Cited Griffith, Malcolm. The Grotesque in American Fiction. Ohio Ohio State University Press. 1996. Fearnow, Mark. The American decimal point and the Great Depression A Cultural History of the Grotesque. New York Cambridge University Press, 1997. Witkin, Joel-Peter. and Stanley B. Burns. Masterpieces of Medical Photography Selections from the Burns Archive. Pasadena, CA Twelvetrees Press, 1987.

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