[영문독후감] 주제사라마구의 눈먼자들의 도시
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A-를 받은 자료입니다.100% 창작이고, 여러가지 참고문헌(page,인터넷주소등을 정확히 기입함)을 사용한 paper입니다.목차
전체적으로 아래의 네가지 기본 질문들 바탕으로 약간의 줄거리를 넣어 영문으로 작성되었습니다.1.How does Saramago (작가) represent the boundary between animalism and humanity?
2.What does "Blindness" symbolize?
3.What did people the people find by being blind?
4.At the end of the novel, how would you say Saramago defines blindness?
본문내용
“If only one person can see in the world of all blind people?” We are not surprised in front of this virtual situation setting, because we all presume that this will never happen in our lives. However, there is a person who set up this unexpected situation in his novel, and warned us of our ignorance in lives. Like other excellent authors, Jose Saramago overruled our standardized lives, and questioned against our habitual lives strongly. “Aren’t we actually blind even though we can see?”One day, a man in his car who’s waiting for the signal to change suddenly lost his sight. This blindness phenomenon spread over an unnamed city rapidly like a breaker and scared all people in the city. The strange epidemic that makes people to go blind once they see other blind people let them experience ‘white blindness.’ The symptom of blindness was quite different from that of original blindness. The first blind man described this blindness as “Nothing, it’s as if I were caught in a mist or had fallen into a milky sea (Saramago, 3).” The government authorities that are puzzled with this scary infection which seems have no cause and cure, confined those infected people into asylum. A main part of this fiction was devoted to a suffering and disorder of the blind people who is isolated by an asylum.
참고 자료
Campbell, Ewing. Raymond Carver: A study of the short fiction. New York. Twayne publishers.Carver, Raymond. Cathedral. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.
Hatton, Barry. Listen carefully: Nobel winner Jose Saramago will tell you a story, but in his own way. South Coast Today. Jan 1st (1999)
Klobucka, Anna. A Writer's Progress. Mass Humanities.
Saramago, Jose. Blindness. Trans. Pontiero, Giovanni. New York. A Harvest Book.