Jorge Luis Borges's Essay 'Blindness'

Decent Essays
In Jorge Luis Borges’s essay, “Blindness,”one of many essays in a form of a lecture that comes from his compilation Seven Nights . His audience is mainly a reader wanting to know more about blindness or has some sort of disability that wants to connect to real life experiences from someone who is struggling with not being like everyone else because of blindness. This essay is his outlook on dealing with his disability by sharing his personal life experiences to share the positive achievements even with a couple of disadvantages,but what is not a limitation. Borges does this through tone, syntax, allusion, metaphors,and pathos ,but also reflects on the authors vulnerability through his personal life experiences in flashbacks he interprets

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    And his being blind bothered me” (Carver 33). He is very honest in his feelings towards the man’s disabilities. Never taking the time to even bother considering the man’s capabilities…

    • 217 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Argument Analysis of “Defining Mental Disability” Defining mental disability is not, under any circumstances, an easy task. One wants to be politically correct, but without actually going through life every day with a disability, how can one even start to define it? One cannot.…

    • 1363 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The blind man is unable to see the Cathedral on television. However, the blind man’s ability to touch shows what he enjoys in life. He was able to touch the face of the person who cared for him and remain in contact with her for years. He…

    • 951 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Hoagland’s “ On Stuttering” This essay was exceedingly interesting; at the heart of this essay, is a person who has struggled with a physical impediment, but has still managed to lead a fairly normal life. Although He struggled with the impediment to the point of not voicing his own opinion, Edward Hoagland adapted to his impediment and was able to overcome the struggles he faced everyday. Some disabilities can leave people trapped inside their own body.…

    • 796 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Disabilities Essay In the excerpts of “Christopher Reeve’s Decision” and “The House on Mango Street”, Cisneros and Reeve represent disabilities through the uses of internal conflict and anaphora that announce that how one deals with a disability, affects how they turn out in the end. In the autobiography, Christopher Reeve uses internal conflict and anaphora to represent disability. When Dr.Jane, Reeve’s doctor, told him that he could never breathe on his own again, he “thought why not die...and save everyone a lot of trouble?”(1) which is severely depressing to the already depressing event taken place.…

    • 746 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    Summary Of Raymond Carver's Cathedral

    • 1416 Words
    • 6 Pages
    • 1 Works Cited

    Yet when he is introduced, it is clear that only his vision is closed off. He welcomes the world and new experiences openly. On the other end of this spectrum is the narrator. His vision is open, and he has the luxury of viewing the world, yet he does the exact opposite. The narrator’s ignorance and unwillingness to learn is more of a handicap than Robert’s blindness.…

    • 1416 Words
    • 6 Pages
    • 1 Works Cited
    Great Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Daniel Kish understands blindness in a literal sense by using echolocation, similar to what some marine animals use to gain a sense of their surroundings. From a sociological standpoint, Kish understands blindness as a form of psychology that is later changed into a tangible reality. The most common misconception of blind people is that their abilities and daily activities are limited because of their lack of eyesight. Kish quickly proves this misconception wrong by describing how personal thoughts and reflections that people ponder about blind people is extremely powerful and allows for future change of opinion. Kish also believes that since a person's expectations of a blind person is so low, they often feel small.…

    • 343 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Each writer has its own unique style. In “Cathedral”, Raymond Carver utilizes the first person point of view so the reader can view the change in the narrator’s perception of the blind man, through different situations that happens throughout the story. The purpose of the first person is to demonstrate the progress and changeover of the narrator which makes it at ease for the readers to understand and feel the thoughts as well as the sentiments that are being experienced by the narrator. The effectiveness of first person narrator give us an enhanced insight into their rational and engagements. In the story, the husband is the narrator telling us in first person point of view.…

    • 1564 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Paradise of the Blind is a great story of three Vietnamese females who were struggling to survive in a society where the women are expected to show extremely respect towards their family and especially men as well as to the Communist immorality that destroyed people hope and confidence at that time. Throughout the character of Hang, a young female in her twenties who has risen in poverty, the misfortune of her own family splits apart their community by a man who requires on employing communist ideology above family loyalty.…

    • 89 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Additionally, returning to the irony of how Julie fits Aunt Bea’s conceptualized haunted figure, however her disability has damaged her chances of having the abled-bodied individual aid her. The first reason this distances Julie’s form connecting to the able-bodied individual is because of her cognitive disability, which makes her incapable of coherently expressing her mental thoughts. Arguably, the societal benefit system is meant to reach and understand individuals like Julie, however it does not, and this further demonstrates society’s failure to properly aid the vulnerable. Problematically, because Julie is recognized as the vulnerable, she causes primal rejection in the able-bodied, and this then causes the able-bodied to minimalized their…

    • 692 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Without actually living in another person’s life, someone cannot really tell what the other person is going through or how they are feeling, and this can occur when it comes to disabled people. In “On Being a Cripple” by Nancy Mairs and “Living Under Circe’s Spell” by Matthew Soyster, the reader is lead into the state of mind of people living with disabilities. The essay written by Mairs analyzes how being disabled does not define someone's character, and Soyster expresses the struggles of being crippled and how others view them. Both essays direct the text towards other people who are disabled, or someone who may have a negative view on disabled people. With the use of diction and other devices, Mairs tends to sound more humorous and lively,…

    • 1118 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Making Of Blindness

    • 1579 Words
    • 7 Pages

    In The Making of Blind Men , Scott provides an interesting opportunity to internally reflect upon how very similar the methods of developing our personal identities as sighted people are to the methods used by the visually impaired. The only major difference is that the societal stimuli offered to each party conflicts. We as a society expect specific traits to be displayed by a blind person, when these expectations are not met we are dumbfounded. We gawk and ask ourselves “How could a blind person do something that ““normal”” people can do?” even though there is no real reason why they can’t.…

    • 1579 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Blindness is however a novel of hope. Initially, it appears we are being confronted with a ‘condition of war of everyone against everyone’ but, gradually, an order of cooperation and mutuality develops. Among the patients is the wife of the…

    • 1111 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    There are many people who see freedom as different thing other than actual freedom. Freedom, to some it’s the right to say what you want, to others it’s the right to believe in whatever religion you want. These freedoms are clear to see, but what if you couldn’t see?…

    • 994 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man contains a variety of motifs throughout the novel, however none are more prevalent than the motif of blindness. Blindness is seen through a variety of mediums throughout the novel and represents how people will willingly avoid seeing the truth. Whether that truth is about the racial prejudice they receive or the truth of one 's self and community, blindness is apparent almost everywhere the narrator goes. One of the first instances of blindness in the novel is when the narrator is recounting the time in which he was meant to share his graduation speech with the prominent white men of his community, only to get there and be forced to participate in a blindfolded battle royal against his black classmates. Being blindfolded represents the narrators, as well as the other classmates, inability to recognize that they are being exploited by the white men.…

    • 777 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays