Assignment
Name: Jalondhara Ravji. J
Roll No: 35
Enrollment No: 2069108420180024
M.A. Sem-1
Year: 2017-18
Paper No: 2 (The Neo-Classical Literature)
Email Id: ravjijalandhara@gmail.com
Submitted: Department of English M.K.Bhavnagar University
“Themes,
Motifs & Symbols”
·
Themes
Themes are the fundamental and often
universal ideas explored in a literary work.
Ø The Ambivalence of Mastery:
Crusoe’s success in mastering his
situation, overcoming his obstacles, and controlling his environment shows the
condition of mastery in a positive light, at least at the beginning of the
novel. Crusoe lands in an inhospitable environment and makes it his home. His
taming and domestication of wild goats and parrots with Crusoe as their master
illustrates his newfound control. Moreover, Crusoe’s mastery over nature makes
him a master of his fate and of himself. Early in the novel, he frequently
blames himself for disobeying his father’s advice or blames the destiny that
drove him to sea. But in the later part of the novel, Crusoe stops viewing
himself as a passive victim and strikes a new note of self-determination. In
building a home for himself on the island, he finds that he is master of his
life—he suffers a hard fate and still finds prosperity.
But this theme of mastery becomes
more complex and less positive after Friday’s arrival, when the idea of mastery
comes to apply more to unfair relationships between humans.
Ø The Necessity of Repentance:
Crusoe’s
experiences constitute not simply an adventure story in which thrilling things
happen, but also a moral tale illustrating the right and wrong ways to live
one’s life. This moral and religious dimension of the tale is indicated in the
Preface, which states that Crusoe’s story is being published to instruct others
in God’s wisdom, and one vital part of this wisdom is the importance of
repenting one’s sins. While it is important to be grateful for God’s miracles,
as Crusoe is when his grain sprouts, it is not enough simply to express
gratitude or even to pray to God, as Crusoe does several times with few
results. Crusoe needs repentance most, as he learns from the fiery angelic
figure that comes to him during a feverish hallucination and says, “Seeing all
these things have not brought thee to repentance, now thou shalt die.” Crusoe
believes that his major sin is his rebellious behavior toward his father, which
he refers to as his “original sin,”
For Crusoe, repentance consists of
acknowledging his wretchedness and his absolute dependence on the Lord. This
admission marks a turning point in Crusoe’s spiritual consciousness, and is
almost a born-again experience for him. After repentance, he complains much
less about his sad fate and views the island more positively. Later, when
Crusoe is rescued and his fortune restored, he compares himself to Job, who
also regained divine favor. Ironically, this view of the necessity of
repentance ends up justifying sin: Crusoe may never have learned to repent if
he had never sinfully disobeyed his father in the first place. Thus, as
powerful as the theme of repentance is in the novel, it is nevertheless complex
and ambiguous.
Ø The Importance of Self-Awareness:
Crusoe’s
arrival on the island does not make him revert to a brute existence controlled
by animal instincts, and, unlike animals, he remains conscious of himself at all
times. Indeed, his island existence actually deepens his self-awareness as he
withdraws from the external social world and turns inward. The idea that the
individual must keep a careful reckoning of the state of his own soul is a key
point in the Presbyterian doctrine that Defoe took seriously all his life. We
see that in his normal day-to-day activities, Crusoe keeps accounts of himself
enthusiastically and in various ways. For example, it is significant that
Crusoe’s makeshift calendar does not simply mark the passing of days, but
instead more egocentrically marks the days he has spent on the island: it is
about him, a sort of self-conscious or autobiographical calendar with him at
its center.
·
Motifs
Motifs are recurring structures, contrasts,
or literary devices that can help to develop and inform the text’s major
themes.
Ø Counting and Measuring:
Crusoe is a careful note-taker
whenever numbers and quantities are involved. He does not simply tell us that
his hedge encloses a large space, but informs us with a surveyor’s precision
that the space is “150 yards in length, and 100 yards in breadth.” He tells us
not simply that he spends a long time making his canoe in Chapter XVI, but that
it takes precisely twenty days to fell the tree and fourteen to remove the
branches. It is not just an immense tree, but is “five foot ten inches in
diameter at the lower part . . . and four foot eleven inches diameter at the
end of twenty-two foot.” Furthermore, time is measured with similar exactitude,
as Crusoe’s journal shows. We may often wonder why Crusoe feels it useful to
record that it did not rain on December 26, but for him the necessity of
counting out each day is never questioned. All these examples of counting and
measuring underscore Crusoe’s practical, businesslike character and his
hands-on approach to life. But Defoe sometimes hints at the futility of
Crusoe’s measuring—as when the carefully measured canoe cannot reach water or
when his obsessively kept calendar is thrown off by a day of oversleeping.
Ø Ordeals at Sea:
Crusoe’s
encounters with water in the novel are often associated not simply with
hardship, but with a kind of symbolic ordeal, or test of character. First, the
storm off the coast of Yarmouth frightens Crusoe’s friend away from a life at
sea, but does not deter Crusoe. Then, in his first trading voyage, he proves
himself a capable merchant, and in his second one, he shows he is able to
survive enslavement. His escape from his Moorish master and his successful
encounter with the Africans both occur at sea. Most significantly, Crusoe
survives his shipwreck after a lengthy immersion in water. But the sea remains
a source of danger and fear even later, when the cannibals arrive in canoes.
The Spanish shipwreck reminds Crusoe of the destructive power of water and of
his own good fortune in surviving it.
·
Symbols
Symbols are objects, characters,
figures, or colors used to represent abstract ideas or concepts.
Ø The Footprint:
Crusoe’s shocking discovery of a
single footprint on the sand in Chapter XVIII is one of the most famous moments
in the novel, and it symbolizes our hero’s conflicted feelings about human
companionship. Crusoe has earlier confessed how much he misses companionship,
yet the evidence of a man on his island sends him into a panic. Immediately he
interprets the footprint negatively, as the print of the devil or of an
aggressor. He never for a moment entertains hope that it could belong to an
angel or another European who could rescue or befriend him. This instinctively
negative and fearful attitude toward others makes us consider the possibility
that Crusoe may not want to return to human society after all, and that the
isolation he is experiencing may actually be his ideal state.
Ø The Cross:
Concerned
that he will “lose [his] reckoning of time” in Chapter VII, Crusoe marks the
passing of days “with [his] knife upon a large post, in capital letters, and
making it into a great cross . . . set[s] it up on the shore where [he] first
landed. . . .” The large size and capital letters show us how important this
cross is to Crusoe as a timekeeping device and thus also as a way of relating
himself to the larger social world where dates and calendars still matter. But
the cross is also a symbol of his own new existence on the island, just as the
Christian cross is a symbol of the Christian’s new life in Christ after
baptism, an immersion in water like Crusoe’s shipwreck experience. Yet Crusoe’s
large cross seems somewhat blasphemous in making no reference to Christ.
Instead, it is a memorial to Crusoe himself, underscoring how completely he has
become the center of his own life.
Conclusion:
Thus, the Themes
are the fundamental and often universal ideas explored in a literary work. Symbols
are objects, characters, figures, or colors used to represent abstract ideas or
concepts. Motifs are recurring
structures, contrasts, or literary devices that can help to develop and inform
the text’s major themes. But this theme of mastery becomes more complex and
less positive after Friday’s arrival, when the idea of mastery comes to apply
more to unfair relationships between humans.
Works Cited
http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/crusoe/themes.html.
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