The introductory part of Life of Pi introduces many of the important themes
of the novel. The importance of storytelling as a theme is immediately apparent, as the line
between fiction and reality is not clear in the opening Author’s Note, a semi-fictional and semi-true part of Yann Martel's novel Life of
Pi. The author’s note also has a challenge that is at the heart of the
novel— the story will make you believe in God.
Foreshadowing is used extensively in this book. The reader does not know much of the story to come, nor who Richard Parker is, but it becomes clear that animals, survival, and freedom is gonna be the important theme in in the next part of the story. Pi argues against the belief that zoo animals are unhappy because they are confined and are not free, by explaining that freedom in the wild, where an animal must always fight to survive, and that they don't need to worry about survival and food in the Zoo. This give foreshadow of Pi's own loss of freedom late while at sea and his fight for survival.
The danger of wild animals is also showed in this part of the story: Richard Parker, is still not introduced, but embodies this danger, whether in a literal or a symbolic way. In literal way, the knowledge of Pi and the reader will increase on the brutality of tigers. If symbolic element of this section is that, it foreshadows how dangerous Pi will become after losing humanity in his fight to stay alive.
The author also talks in depth about the relationship between religion and science. Pi cannot keep his both majors in religion and zoology straight,although to typical person they would seem fairly desperate. His favorite teacher, Mr. Kumar, sees the zoo as his temple. And Pi compares the misunderstanding about the zoo, and freedom, with to the misunderstanding many have about religion. With this Pi opens the reader to the idea that belief in anything can also belief in God.
In chapters 12-28 deals mainly with one of Pi’s characteristics—mainly his passion and enthusiasm. Here Pi tells the story on how he became a Hindu, Christian, and Muslim, and it becomes clear to the reader that God is central to Pi, and when this happened he was even in his early years. That this kind of enthusiasm is unique in young boys, now we can we see the three holy men in Pi’s life fight with each other over whose religion is best. Even the people who helped Pi to find to God in different ways have become confused over the details.
This section highlights Pi’s devotion to his religions, when we see him up facing many obstacles. The holy men themselves do not want Pi to share himself with other religions, his parents would prefer him to be just Hindu as they were, and his brother mocks him. Even the religious communities sees him differently once they find out that he is not devoted to one religion but many. Yet none of these comments affects Pi’s devotion to his three religions, and to God.
This section also restates the theme of storytelling. In one chapter the author describes his own writing of this story, trying to remember the exact words and the impression they left on him by Pi. The next chapter has the words that author was trying to remember. "He exists as a figure standing between the story and the reader"; even if he says these words exactly, the author is still controlling the readers point of view of it, and thus knowing the heretofore objective subjective.
It also becomes clear here - in Chapter 21 clearly - that the author had already began to open up to Pi’s story, to find faith in Pi’s words. Storytelling and belief in God are completely linked; both require faith.
This section from chapter 29-36, it contains the turning point of the novel, when Pi’s life goes from normal to deadly. At the end of Part 1, Pi’s family began a new journey, which seemed to be a fun journey to a new country. Instead, Pi becomes an orphan, with everyone and everything he has ever loved and known had sunk to the bottom ocean with the ship.
The end of Part 1 contains ideas on what is going to happen in Part 2. Pi helps his Muslim mentor and his favorite teacher - both whose names were Mr. Kumar - feed a zebra together. Who they saw as a beautiful and noble creature in the Zoo. Here, in the zoo, that might have been be true, but in the next tragic part of the book, after the sinking, the zebra will have to face torture- and that to in the ugliest manner that is is possible. The scene with the zebra in the zoo can be interpreted as, it was symbolizing the last moment of Pi’s innocence and his freedom in his country, before he the torture he is also gonna face to survive in part 2 .
As the end of Part 1 approaches, the author gives out clues which hints the crossing of the Pacific, which will serve as a grave loss of Pi's innocence and the noticeable change in him. The author shows pictures from Pi's life, but only ones after the crossing are clear; there are only few before the crossing, but they don't show much.
The final line of Part 1 is also significant: “This story has a happy ending.” It is a a very powerful and influential sentence, because the reader has not learned of any of Pi’s suffering that he faced. This declaration of hope and optimism indicates doom, foreshadowing the devastating problems and dangers that Pi must soon face in part 2 of the Life of Pi
Whether or not the reader is at the end, the reader convinced of this story. The author/narrator, who never seems unbelieving, becomes a believer. Mr. Okamoto and Mr. Chiba, who at first have little faith in PI’s story, in the end accept the story and and also that God is real. In the first section, the reader knows nothing about this, and does not have any idea on how the story will insert faith in to the reader. Yet the story presents this as an option, by focusing on storytelling and the various connections between science and religion. The
book's opening makes its way for a final jump of faith that the novel will ask the reader.
Foreshadowing is used extensively in this book. The reader does not know much of the story to come, nor who Richard Parker is, but it becomes clear that animals, survival, and freedom is gonna be the important theme in in the next part of the story. Pi argues against the belief that zoo animals are unhappy because they are confined and are not free, by explaining that freedom in the wild, where an animal must always fight to survive, and that they don't need to worry about survival and food in the Zoo. This give foreshadow of Pi's own loss of freedom late while at sea and his fight for survival.
The danger of wild animals is also showed in this part of the story: Richard Parker, is still not introduced, but embodies this danger, whether in a literal or a symbolic way. In literal way, the knowledge of Pi and the reader will increase on the brutality of tigers. If symbolic element of this section is that, it foreshadows how dangerous Pi will become after losing humanity in his fight to stay alive.
The author also talks in depth about the relationship between religion and science. Pi cannot keep his both majors in religion and zoology straight,although to typical person they would seem fairly desperate. His favorite teacher, Mr. Kumar, sees the zoo as his temple. And Pi compares the misunderstanding about the zoo, and freedom, with to the misunderstanding many have about religion. With this Pi opens the reader to the idea that belief in anything can also belief in God.
In chapters 12-28 deals mainly with one of Pi’s characteristics—mainly his passion and enthusiasm. Here Pi tells the story on how he became a Hindu, Christian, and Muslim, and it becomes clear to the reader that God is central to Pi, and when this happened he was even in his early years. That this kind of enthusiasm is unique in young boys, now we can we see the three holy men in Pi’s life fight with each other over whose religion is best. Even the people who helped Pi to find to God in different ways have become confused over the details.
This section highlights Pi’s devotion to his religions, when we see him up facing many obstacles. The holy men themselves do not want Pi to share himself with other religions, his parents would prefer him to be just Hindu as they were, and his brother mocks him. Even the religious communities sees him differently once they find out that he is not devoted to one religion but many. Yet none of these comments affects Pi’s devotion to his three religions, and to God.
This section also restates the theme of storytelling. In one chapter the author describes his own writing of this story, trying to remember the exact words and the impression they left on him by Pi. The next chapter has the words that author was trying to remember. "He exists as a figure standing between the story and the reader"; even if he says these words exactly, the author is still controlling the readers point of view of it, and thus knowing the heretofore objective subjective.
It also becomes clear here - in Chapter 21 clearly - that the author had already began to open up to Pi’s story, to find faith in Pi’s words. Storytelling and belief in God are completely linked; both require faith.
This section from chapter 29-36, it contains the turning point of the novel, when Pi’s life goes from normal to deadly. At the end of Part 1, Pi’s family began a new journey, which seemed to be a fun journey to a new country. Instead, Pi becomes an orphan, with everyone and everything he has ever loved and known had sunk to the bottom ocean with the ship.
The end of Part 1 contains ideas on what is going to happen in Part 2. Pi helps his Muslim mentor and his favorite teacher - both whose names were Mr. Kumar - feed a zebra together. Who they saw as a beautiful and noble creature in the Zoo. Here, in the zoo, that might have been be true, but in the next tragic part of the book, after the sinking, the zebra will have to face torture- and that to in the ugliest manner that is is possible. The scene with the zebra in the zoo can be interpreted as, it was symbolizing the last moment of Pi’s innocence and his freedom in his country, before he the torture he is also gonna face to survive in part 2 .
As the end of Part 1 approaches, the author gives out clues which hints the crossing of the Pacific, which will serve as a grave loss of Pi's innocence and the noticeable change in him. The author shows pictures from Pi's life, but only ones after the crossing are clear; there are only few before the crossing, but they don't show much.
The final line of Part 1 is also significant: “This story has a happy ending.” It is a a very powerful and influential sentence, because the reader has not learned of any of Pi’s suffering that he faced. This declaration of hope and optimism indicates doom, foreshadowing the devastating problems and dangers that Pi must soon face in part 2 of the Life of Pi
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Pi's life after the tragic accident |
This picture is when Pi loses everyone and everything he knew and loved
Yann Martel's Interview
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