Thursday, November 14, 2019
Cynicism in Dorothy Allisons Short Story, This Is Our World :: Our World
Cynicism in Dorothy Allison's Short Story, This Is Our World Is ââ¬Å"The world is meaner than we admitâ⬠(Allison 159)? In the short story, ââ¬Å"This Is Our World,â⬠Dorothy Allison asks this question, and her response startled me. I disagree with her way of thinking. Allison says that the world is a cruel, mean place. I think that the cruelty is balanced out with the goodness in the world. I was surprised to read her negative examples of how bad of a place it is that we live in and call ââ¬Å"home.â⬠This story was written with reference to events and occurrences that I have never experienced and things I have never seen. I found it difficult to relate to these events. The minister, the narrator, and her mother walked around the building where the narratorââ¬â¢s mother was to be baptized. Then they looked at the baptismal font. Allison states, ââ¬Å"Watching baptisms in that tank was like watching movies at a drive-inâ⬠(155). I was glad to read that the narrator was not the one being baptized, because I feel she did not understand the true significance of the baptism ritual. She spoke of the Jesus painting as being, ââ¬Å"rouged and pale and pout as Elvis Presleyâ⬠(155). She was also trying not to giggle at the other little boys that were being baptized that day, ââ¬Å"He looked as if he hoped someone would rescue him. It was too much for me. I began to giggle helplesslyâ⬠(156). The narrator was too young to understand fully what it meant to be baptized. I believe that it is one of the reasons that Allison has such a negative attitude towards life. Maybe she did not agree or understand the meaning of a baptism, or religion as a whole. This could stem from a broken home life and no strong father figure. Although I have been fortunate enough to have a father and mother who love me a great deal, I still think the world can be cruel and mean. But meaner than we think? Every day we hear of some new tragedy that she speaks of, ââ¬Å"the woman who drowned her children, the man who shot first the babies in her arms and then his wife, the teenage boys who led the three-year-old away along the train track, the homeless family recovering from frostbite with their eyes glazed and indifferent while the doctor scowled over their shouldersâ⬠(159), but every day we also hear of the good things.
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