Thursday, March 28, 2019
A Perfect Day for Bananafish :: Perfect Day Bananafish
A Perfect Day for Bananafish       Picture travel into a hotel room  and finding a  man dead on a bed.  Upon  closer inspection it becomes obvious that he has supposedly interpreted his own life with the gun that lay beside him.  In  talking to his wife who was asleep on the bed next to him when this incident occurred, it is learned that he just walked in the door and shot  himself late the previous night.  fall out of the many questions that could be asked from this story, I conceptualise that it is probably extremely weighty to consider why  the main character, Seymour frosting, decided to commit suicide.             What I believe to be the reason for Seymours suicide has two basic components the spectral depravity of the world around him, and his struggle with his own ghostlike shortcomings. The spiritual problem of the outside world is mostly a matter of textile greed, especially in the west, and materialism.  On the other hand, his own spiritual problem is more a matter of intellectual greed and true spiritualism.             In addressing the suicide, the difference should be distinguished between the See More Glass that we see done little Sybils eyes, and the Seymour Glass that we see through the eyes of  the adult world.  Even though these two characters are in theory the same man, they are slightly variant in some(prenominal) ways. You could also say that they are the same character in different stages of development. Whatever the case may be, the reasons for the suicide shift slightly in emphasis as the character changes.             A Perfect Day for Bananafish attempts to stand for that the bananas in  See More Glasss story act as all of the things which are taken in along the journey to adulthood.  If pursue with too much zeal, these bananas can prevent spiritual development and play to a greater materialistic development.  See-More has realized that he cannot get liberate of enough bananas to make any further spiritual progress in this life, so, rather than waste time, he commits suicide.  This is slightly obvious when he is fetching the elevator back  up to his room on the night of the suicide.  His fixture upon his feet, which do not resemble the childlike feet that he desires to have, and the woman in the elevators scorn towards Seymours accusing her of staring at his feet, drive him to dislike the adult world even more.
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