Alice Munro

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    VY100 Fall 2015 Section 6 A forced gender role, a reflection of the society Alice Munro, a famous Canadian writer, tells a story about a tomboy’s resistance to womanhood in a society filled with gender biases and stereotypes in her “boys and girls”. The time background of the story is 1940s, when women were considered inferior to men and were looked down upon. Instead of pointing out this reality straightforward, Munro uses metaphor, which makes the story more thought-provoking .For example,…

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    Notorious for her short fictional works, Alice Munro is greatly respected for her thrilling stories. Runaway, a collection of brief yet compelling stories, variously illustrates two recurring themes revolving around young women. Munro maintains that love is often entangled with infinite struggle and the dangers of betrayal; moreover, throughout this collection, Munro is persistent with emphasizing to the reader that fleeing from the struggles of one’s life is not a solution, and that the…

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    doesn't mean you're alive." This quote contains a valuable life lesson. In Alice Munro's Runaway, the female main characters are characterized to be disappointed with the life they have. Most of the women's dreams have perished due to their romantic relationships, predestined lives, or family. In the short story, "Runaway", the main character, Carla states, “I have always felt the need of a more authentic kind of life" (Munro 76). By saying this, Carla describes the need for spontaneity and…

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    around us and in other parts of the world can help us understand ourselves by taking the time to know them and accepting them the way they are .We don’t take notice until someone else points it out to us like in the story “Day of the Butterfly” by Alice Munro. This author is from Canada and in her selection shows that were are not any different, we think about life the same and we all cope with what Society throws at us. Bullies are found everywhere, and society judges you and pegs you by class…

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    Alice Munro Conformity

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    “In literature, the theme always expresses a point-of-view on some aspect of the human condition” (Beck, Dirk). The human condition Alice Munro’s the “Red Dress” alludes to is the theme of conformity. Conformity shows itself in the form of an adolescent girl’s mother, the magazines the nameless narrator and her friend read, and an outlier who shows a person can be happy without conforming. The narrator’s mother is a woman who doesn’t care about the way she comes across, at the same time has…

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    Their children simply do not have to do any work. What parents do not understand is the hardship that children go through, due to being powerless. Their struggles are clearly exhibited in “Eleven,” by Sandra Cisneros, and “Boys and Girls,” by Alice Munro. Both authors show the troubles children face growing up, through being young; conflicted with themselves and others; and having no option due to their parents’ authority. Overall demonstrating how coming of age is difficult for children, due to…

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    realization that the adult world is complex and difficult. In the short story “Boys and Girls,” Alice Munro successfully explores the protagonist’s innocence of the world’s stereotypes, conflict between…

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    The red dress in the short story “A Red Dress-1946” by Alice Munro, symbolizes the narrator’s liminal space amidst adulthood and childhood. Her longing to transition forth adulthood is conveyed by the description of the tight red dress’s ability to accentuate her breasts, thus maturing her image. Munro writes, “The red velvet dress…[was] very tight in the midriff. I saw how my breasts, in their new brassiere, jutted out surprisingly, with mature authority.” The narrator’s new dress represents a…

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    Alice Munro is a phenomenal author who won the 2013 Nobel Prize and is the “master of the contemporary short story” ("The Nobel Prize in Literature 2013”). Munro has an uncanny ability produce normal every day characters with a unique and driven story that highlight many themes. In her short story, “Carried Away” Munro attempts to unveil the mysteries of fate, love, sex and death in a unique and original perspective from a young library set in the early 1900’s. All of these themes, which may…

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    can affect each person's thoughts, feelings, desires and most importantly their identity/individuality. The actions that take place in the stories Alice Munro boys and girls, Kate Chopin The Story of an Hour , Anton Chekhov The Ninny portray different types of stereotypes that affect the woman's individuality and depict them as powerless. Alice Munro has often written about the gap that separates men and women. In “Boys and Girls,” the main theme is gender stereotyping and in the story, the…

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