"An
Occurrence at Owl Breek Bridge" is set during the American Civil War, when the North and
South fought over many things, but most importantly, slavery. The main character of the story,
Peyton Farquhar, is described as "a well-to-do planter, of an old and highly respected
Alabama family" and a slave owner. Politically-speaking, then, he sides with the South in
their wanting to keep slavery as an economic right. The South wanted to secede, or split, from
the rest of the country and create their own country, which is why they had their own President
for a time, Jefferson Davis. In the context of this story, Farquhar is a proud Southern
plantation owner who has devoted himself to their cause from the beginning. This information is
important to the story because it is this fervor for the Southern cause that persuades him to
attempt to blow up the Owl Creek Bridge, which he was tricked into doing by a Federal scout
(mentioned in the last sentence of Part II); the Federal scout is on the Northern side, but he
was dressed in grey, which was the uniform of the Confederates (the
South).
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
In the second sentence in part 2 of "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge," the word "secessionist" is used. What does that sentence mean?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
How is Joe McCarthy related to the play The Crucible?
When we read its important to know about Senator Joseph McCarthy. Even though he is not a character in the play, his role in histor...
-
"Festival" addresses the age-old difficulty of generational gaps, in the setting of a traditional Chinese-style New Y...
-
Sipho Sepamla is a South African poet born in 1932. He wrote during Apartheid and had some of his work banned by the Apartheid regi...
-
An is an expression that has a meaning which cannot be derived from the combined meaning of its words. To put it somewhat different...
No comments:
Post a Comment