Also, Johnny is like "The Rose That Grew From Concrete" because she had started off life in his concrete stage or his adversity stage with his family, broken free of that when he had saved the kids from the church, and then grown to his rose stage, when he was in the hospital, about to die, talking to Ponyboy when he had matured and developed into an adult.
In the movie, “Johnny Got His Gun,” Johnny's flashbacks are from a combination of ether and the battle Johnny made it through. His head is very messed up and injuries are very bad. Because of these nightmares, they bring him flashbacks. It is on account that his injuries are so bad that remembering home and his girl are his ways of coping. His first flashback is of having conversations with his girl.
His embarrassment causes him to enlist in the military and he ends up serving time in Vietnam. The novel touches on his experiences and bonds with his platoon while serving his time in Vietnam. Throughout the book, Myers shows a realistic depiction of war such as the graphic violence, the inner thoughts of a soldier, and how the platoon struggles to survive. Throughout the novel, Myers utilizes many different ways to portray the realistic depiction of war.
The Enlightening “They died with only one thought in their minds and that was I want to live I want to live I want to live.” In the 1939 book “Johnny Got His Gun” by Dalton Trumbo, the main character Joe Bonham was drafted into World War 1. During the war Joe’s trench, along with almost everything inside, was terminated. Joe suffered the tragic loss of both legs, arms and all five of his senses from the shell. Joe understands first hand that in the moment of death the single thought racing through his broken and destroyed body is “I want to live”.
In Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried, the author retells the chilling, and oftentimes gruesome, experiences of the Vietnam war. He utilizes many anecdotes and other rhetorical devices in his stories to paint the image of what war is really like to people who have never experienced it. In the short stories “Spin,” “The Man I Killed,” and “ ,” O’Brien gives reader the perfect understanding of the Vietnam by placing them directly into the war itself. In “Spin,” O’Brien expresses the general theme of war being boring and unpredictable, as well as the soldiers being young and unpredictable.
”(3) In this moment, the sniper’s overall view on the war changes within seconds. The quick mood change and regret towards killing the enemy establishes a sense of foreshadowing to what could come as a consequence. If the sniper had missed and both of the opposing fighters had gotten away, the consequence of a family divide would not have been conveyed. However, O’Flaherty uses these situations to give readers the takeaway of not only the outcomes of war but, the outcome of a family divided through
To begin, these brief revivals of the past help the reader make sense of the character’s terrified response to a particular event. In the novel, Johnny Got His Gun, Dalton Trumbo reveals the many thoughts Joe Bonham has as he struggles to accept the loss of his limbs. While he daydreams about his love towards a “special someone,” Joe murmured and realizes, “Kareen in my arms. Both of them… I haven’t got any arms Kareen. My arms are gone,” which demonstrates how remembering their final moments together made his wound discovery even more horrifying and difficult to accept (Trumbo 38).
The soldiers in the Vietnam War are portrayed as losing themselves in the chaos and trauma of combat. Through the stories of the soldiers and their experiences, O’Brien explores the ways in which war strips away one's sense of identity and humanity. The author himself is depicted as losing himself in the war. O'Brien served in the Vietnam War, and his experiences inspired much of the book. Through the character of Tim O'Brien, the author explores the ways in which war can strip away one's sense of self and purpose.
In Johnny Got His Gun by Dalton Trumbo, Joe Bonham becomes disabled due to a shell explosion, when fighting, in World War I. While Joe is hospitalized, he learns that he has lost his arms, his legs, his ears, his eyes, and most of his face. Although it seems impossible for Joe to be able to communicate with the outside world, he finds ways to talk with his nurses and doctors: tapping, shaking and swaying back and forth. The novel is written in a way that frequently alternates between Joe’s childhood memories and his current state. By doing so, it allows the reader to distinguish the differences between Joe’s previous life and the life he has now.
Hidden somewhere within the blurred lines of fiction and reality, lies a great war story trapped in the mind of a veteran. On a day to day basis, most are not willing to murder someone, but in the Vietnam War, America’s youth population was forced to after being pulled in by the draft. Author Tim O’Brien expertly blends the lines between fiction, reality, and their effects on psychological viewpoints in the series of short stories embedded within his novel, The Things They Carried. He forces the reader to rethink the purpose of storytelling and breaks down not only what it means to be human, but how mortality and experience influence the way we see our world. In general, he attempts to question why we choose to tell the stories in the way
In Johnny Got His Gun, author Dalton Trumbo describes the relationship between a young man named Joe, and his father. Trumbo uses several reading strategies to do so, but the most prominent ones displayed are the usage of point of view, selection of detail, and syntax. Utilizing all three of these techniques is what makes a relationship between father and son so vivid and demonstrates how strong and trusting the relationship is. Firstly, Dalton Trumbo uses point of view to depict Joe’s relationship with his father.
A hero can be anyone. They can be your closest friend or your worst enemy. A hero would give up or risk their lives for anyone. They have a great personality and they would compliment people with their accomplishments. Johnny is a hero.
In the passage from the novel Johnny Got His Gun by Dalton Trumbo, Trumbo tells the story of a young boy named Joe and his father, who have a very close relationship. They each love to do the same things, but Joe thinks it is time to experience life on his own. Trumbo uses techniques such as Joe’s point of view, imagery, and unquoted dialogue to illustrate the strong relationship between Joe and his father. First, Trumbo uses third person limited point of view to only share the main character’s thoughts throughout the story.
Johnny Got His Gun Dalton Trumbo’s novel, “Johnny Got His Gun” tells all about a father and son relationship that many people may envy for. Trumbo characterizes their relationship with a respectful tone, yet Trumbo also makes the love and trust the father and son share very apparent throughout the novel. Trumbo is able utilize literary devices such as third person point of view and a lack of formal punctuation, using syntax to help the reader have a better perspective on the relationship the father and son partake in.
A hero is a murder to, aren’t they? The Outsiders by S.E.Hinton is about how people see other people they don’t know, examples include how the greasers view the socs. Also this story occurs in a city that is divided into gangs that fight each other about what gang is better. One character that I find interesting is Johnny. He is interesting because, he is one of the protagonists, and antagonist, Also he is around and dynamic character, he has two sides to him and changed from a scared but to a hero.