Rationale “(…) none of the stories are invented. Nine out of ten of them are just as they came to me fresh from the life of the people, faithfully to portray which should, after all, be the aim of all fiction, as it must be its sufficient reward.”
Most of the stories revolve around Christmas time = a hope for a better life, hope for a change is felt almost in every story SETTING: a ghetto = a part of the city in which many poor people or many people of a particular race, religion or nationality live separately from everyone else; this is highlighted by the names of the people living in the neighborhood: Godfrey Krueger (German name), Mrs. Lee (the name means ‘shelter’ / ‘sheltered from the storm – Old English, OR ‘healer’ in Celtic and Am. E.), Mrs. Ferguson (Scottish, Irish name), Mr. Schmidt (German name), Mr. Feeney (Irish name that refers to a soldier), Mr. Stein (German / Hebrew origin meaning ‘stone’), Mr. McCarthy (originated in Ireland), Miss Linder (German origin meaning ‘lime tree’) THEME: human condition under harsh living conditions; When the Letter Came Theme: misery (both human and human nature), lack of a better perspective on life brings to suicide Abstract: An inventor eaten by hunger and humiliation, tired of hoping of a hopeless way out of poverty commits suicide before his pension is granted. It is important to mention the fact that “tomorrow” = is not really a physical time, but it embodies the idea of hope, “tomorrow” is timeless, it’s just a cliché for what the character wishes
The Little Dollar’s Christmas Journey
Theme: altruism, human kindness Abstract: On Christmas Eve a certain Mrs. Lee (whose name’s means ‘shelter’/’sheltered from the storm’/ ‘healer’) sends a coupon that is worth one dollar to a professor in order to buy a Christmas tree to a poor child of the tenements. The story is about the journey of the little dollar and the joy it brings all along the journey to the ones that encounter it. Every time the coupon is refused to be accepted by different merchants there is a person who acknowledges it and offers a real dollar in exchange. So, it helps a mother with 6 children, a cartman and his horse, a girl who buys a shawl for her sick mother, a newspaper boy, a girl whose father is in hospital. Strangely, it gets back to the professor’s wife who decides to give it to a father who could not buy a Christmas tree for his children. The little dollar is a metaphor that stands for hope, mutual help and human kindness that is revealed at least once a year: at about Christmas time.
John Gavin, Misfit
Theme: human being unable to cope with life’s hard challenges is pushed into the arms of death by committing suicide Abstract: A father of six, a young man of thirty-four, jobless and without any hope of getting one, decides to commit suicide. He would accept any job, no matter how low it made him feel, but he was refused on grounds of sickness. One may see his gesture of committing suicide as a sign of weakness, as a sign of a total giving up. We tend to forget that pain mixed with guilt and regrets and helplessness are a deadly mixture that finally leads a person to the dramatic gesture. Still, “there is no honor in suicide and denial” – as stated by Ronald Isaac Landau in his book The Hour of the Milk is no Longer White: a Novella of Philosophic Transcendence. The lack of immediate perspective, depersonalized by hunger, sickness, helplessness, topped by self denial and being unable to adapt to a life that is ruled by troubles and poverty, these are the ingredients that society used to turn him against himself up to the point he could not be aware of his loss of personhood. The feeling of not belonging and thus being denied the integration into society pushes the human being to extreme acts of which society can be blamed of: “For Gavin alive there was no place. At least he did not find it; for which, let it be said and done with, he was to blame. Dead, society will find one for him. And for the one misfit got off the list there are seven whom not employment bureau nor woodyard nor charity register can be made to reach. Social economy the thing is called; which makes the eighth misfit.”
_________________ Monika Bandi
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