Each of the works …show more content…
Le Guin. The wife in the story is astonished and and horrified by her husband’s transformation into a human (Le Guin). The story allows the indirect idea of humans role within the society of nature. For example, the wife, who is a wolf, represents nature and animals, while the husband represents humanity. Throughout the story, the husband gains the trust of the wife and is unaware that the wife senses his true energy when he is dealing with the children. She states, “He {the Husband} came in and she got all scared-looking, stiff, with her eyes wide, and then she begun to cry and try to hide behind me. She didn’t yet talk plain but she was saying over and over ‘Make it go away!’ … The looks in his eyes, just that moment, when he heard that. That’s what I don’t want ever to remember”(Le Guin). This is equivalent to humanity and nature. They seem to gain the trust of various species and then abandon them or turn on them. For instance, Native Americans worship and idolize the wolf, yet others do not view them this way and result to killing them for their fur.The theme portrayed in this work is along the lines that humans have a tendency to use pain and fear when they are interacting with animals and it results negative typically.For Example, the narrator states, “It [the husband] stared and peered, that thing that my husband turned into and shove his face up to the entrance of our house. I was still bound by …show more content…
(Eastwood). Within the work, the power that Mandela withholds while he is president represents his will to unite his country, while the South African Rugby Team represented unity and peace. Also, the victory of the South African Rugby Team represented successful unity amongst the country. Another factor that led to the conclusion of the theme was Nelson Mandela’s determination to end the discrimination in his country. Concluding, the theme is that each individual creates and impacts their own future as well as others. With Mandela’s determination to disperse peace throughout his country, he motivates his people to do the same (Eastwood). Clint Eastwood imagines that individuals, such as Nelson Mandela, own vital and powerful roles amongst a society. He shows that one person can infuse a common goal, such as uniting despite diversity, unto an abundance of