Saturday, July 20, 2019
Rereading Atwoods Surfacing :: Atwood Surfacing Essays
      Rereading Atwood's Surfacing           The class touched on a multitude of different subjects during the class time  for the second discussion of the novel, Surfacing. These discussions were much  deeper than the previous one, asking questions on motivation and symbolism  rather than plot and language. Two of the most popular subjects were  characterization and the validity of the narrator and the information she gives  the reader. Other topics were discussed including religion, the bird motif that  has appeared throughout our readings this semester, and the narrator's artistic  frustration among many others.            To begin with one of the most prominent subjects, the class discussed  character-ization at length. Many students wondered what the narrator's friends  added to the story, whether they were symbolic of something, reflections of the  narrator's characteristics, or representatives of other individuals. Daniel  suggested that the narrator was projecting the identities of her parents onto  her friends. For instance, David was representative of the narrator's brother  ("fascist pig yanks") with his militancy and Joe was the narrator's father,  capable of love and close to her heart. Erin echoed this idea, saying that Anna  was representative of the narrator's mother who concealed all of her pain and  unhappiness throughout the story. Other students, though, had different ideas.  Stephanie thought that the narrator's friends were symbolic, Joe as nature,  David as the city, and Anna as the "icky" things about being a girl. As these  were discussed, other ideas "surfaced" and the narrator's    brother was thought to  represent absolutism while her mother, like Joe, represented nature. Judy  expanded on this, saying that David was perhaps representative of the narrator's  previous lover. All of these ideas were well backed and well stated, leaving  each individual student to decide which characters represented who or what.            Another topic that was discussed at length was the narrator herself. In Forum  II, Mandy began by questioning the narrator's humanness and what, exactly,  constitutes being human. The discussion picked up these thoughts and began to  question whether the narrator was actually domesticated or wild. She cooks and  cleans for the others, taking care of them basically the whole time, but it was  argued that she seemed to be hardly one predisposed to subservience.  					    
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