Saturday, July 20, 2019
Knowles Separate Peace Essays: Character Traits :: Separate Peace Essays
    Character Traits in A Separate Peace        In the book A Separate Peace by John Knowles, one of the     main themes is the effects of realism, idealism, and isolationism on     Brinker, Phineas, and Gene.  Though not everyone can be described     using one of these approaches to life, the approaches     completely conform to these characters to create one realist, one idealist,     and one isolationist; thereby providing the foundation of the novel.     The realist is Brinker.  Brinker's realism takes on a very morbid     quality after Gene decides not to enlist with him, do to Phineas's     return to Devon.  Brinker still sees everything the way it is, but     begins to think that the way it is, is bad.  On page 122, he is quoted     as saying, "Frankly, I just don't see anything     to celebrate, winter or spring or anything else."  Brinker will scrutinize     any incident until he finds a dark side to it, because, in his mind, at least     one side of everything is a dark side.  Already we have the footing for our     climax.              Phineas (Finny) is the idealist.  Like Brinker, Finny's approach      experiences a grim metamorphoses. Before his accident, Finny sees     the world as a glorious playing field and life as a never ending game.      After his accident; however, Finny begins to view the world through     the eyes of a paranoid old man who is always seeing something     covert in everything.  On page 106, Finny even goes as far     as to ask Gene, "Do you really think that the United States of America is     in a state of war with Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan?"  This outlook     is a mental facade that only succeeds in setting Finny up for a harder     fall.              Finally there is the isolationist, Gene.  Gene's approach is     austere from the beginning.  It is Gene who generates the dark     change in the others.  Gene looks for danger in everything he is     emotionally close to.  When he finds danger, he ostracizes     himself from whatever it is that is posing a threat to him.  If he can not     find danger, as with Finny, he creates it.  On page 45 he strives so hard     to create danger in Finny that he falsely concludes that, "Finny had     deliberately set out to wreck my studies."  This creates the story's     					    
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