The Things They
Carried
by Tim O’Brien is a collection of short stories centered around the Vietnam
War. The first short story shares a title with the book. “The Things They
Carried” presents readers with the tragedy of the Vietnam War and its affects
on the young men who fought in it. O’Brien illustrates the burdens, both
physical and mental, the young soldiers were forced to carry. Throughout the
story, O’Brien frequently uses repetition to emphasize the pain of the
men. “They carried…” is repeated over
and over again illuminating the hardships of the soldiers. They carried their
fear, pain, shame, and guilt on top of the pounds and pounds of their equipment
– usually the intangible weighing more than the tangible. The story focuses
mostly on Jimmy Cross, a First Lieutenant who is in love with a girl named
Martha back home. O’Brien repeats the line, “… Martha had never mentioned the
war, except to say, Jimmy, take care of yourself,” (2 and 23). This emphasizes
the disconnect between many of the citizens of United States and those fighting
the war. Martha, a college student, most likely protested the war and that is
why she rarely talked about it in her letters.
The repetition of Martha in Cross’s thoughts represents the hope of
love. Cross thinks of his beloved to pass the time and make his life somewhat bearable
in Vietnam. The break in repetition of Martha towards the end of the story
marks Cross’s loss of innocence. When one of his men, Ted Lavender, is shot
while Cross is day dreaming about Martha, his feelings dramatically shift from
love to hate. O’Brien again uses the repletion of prefacing any sentence about Lavender
with “Until he was shot…” to emphasize the effect of the death on cross. The
idea of love versus hate runs throughout the story. By burning his pictures of
Martha and her letters, Cross’s love loses to the war, to hate, as he becomes
jaded and hardened.
I think that the repetition in The Things They Carried is an extremely important literary device utilized throughout the first story. The author uses the repetition of weights per item that the men carry to give the reader an idea of how heavy their equipment is. As the ounces and pounds add up, the reader imagines the men "humping" an unbearable amount of weight around Vietnam. This is important because although there is emphasis on the physical weight the men carry, the author makes sure that the reader understands that the mental things that they carry are much heavier. This is why the repetition of "until he was shot" is so important. It makes the audience realize that no physical amount of weight could match the weight you carry after watching your fellow men be killed.
ReplyDeletei think it's a good book
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