Sunday, January 13, 2019
A Rose for Emily: Demonstrate of Homer as the Victim Essay
Emily is clearly a villain in the short story, A Rose for Emily. Although much of her character came from her initiates abuse, she remains responsible for her actions. In the story, Emily is obsessed with avoiding change. She is a symbol of the overage South, and clearly represents the few traditionalists following the civilian War. The traditionalists are clearly the villains in the South, because they leave behind not let go of the damaging past of slavery, as Emily is in A Rose for Emily, because she will not let go of her negative past. She refuses to let go of the changes she is faced with, for example the death of her incur and the idea of not being with home run forever bring her to unleash her intimate anger.Consequently, due to her neglect of allowing change, she develops villain behaviors. Her lack of wanting change does not prefigure for her insane actions, nor make her a victim. Emily knows that homing pigeon will not marry her whence she turns to killing him so that she can be with him forever. She refuses to let him go, which makes her only a victim of herself, thus a villain. The murder was doubtless premeditated because she planned the death of homer by going to the store to corrupt arsenic. When the pharmacists asked her what it was for, she refused to check. If she was a victim she would not cede a problem explaining the circumstances. Since she did not tell she knew that what she was doing was wrong, which makes her a villain.Emily uses the death of kor for her have got pleasure. She believes that trapping his dead(p) body, as soundly as her fathers dead body will ease her loneliness. This egocentric act shows she has no concern for others. This, again, demonstrates that Homer is the only victim in this story.
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