Indian Camp: Difference between revisions

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== Plot Summary ==
== Plot Summary ==
"Indian Camp" is a narrative about a child named Nick going on a journey to experience the aspects of life and death. Nick’s father has been requested to help an Indian lady who has been in painful labor for two days. His father takes his son, Nick, and his brother, George, to witness the birth of a child. The woman in labor is located on an island. She’s sheltered in a shanty, laying on a wooden bunk bed. The father delivers the baby in a horrendous way, causing suffering to the lady throughout the process. Afterward, the father discovers that the woman's husband committed suicide by slitting his throat. Nick witnesses the whole situation. During the journey back home, Nick asks his father questions about the incidents, and His father explains to him what happened. After the conversation, Nick begins to have the sensibility of bravery and immortality. He feels, “ that he would never die”.{{sfn|Sipora|2002|p=31}}
“Indian Camp” is a narrative about a child named Nick going on a journey to experience the aspects of life and death. Nick’s father has been requested to help an Indian lady who has been in painful labor for two days. His father takes his son, Nick, and his brother, George, to witness the birth of a child. The woman in labor is located on an island. She’s sheltered in a shanty, laying on a wooden bunk bed. The father delivers the baby in a horrendous way, causing suffering to the lady throughout the process. Afterward, the father discovers that the woman's husband committed suicide by slitting his throat. Nick witnesses the whole situation. During the journey back home, Nick asks his father questions about the incidents, and His father explains to him what happened. After the conversation, Nick begins to have the sensibility of bravery and immortality. He feels, “that he would never die”.


==Major Themes==
==Major Themes==
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The story gives Nick two options for reacting to ladies' torment-and the experience in this story is suffering. The primary option is to relate to the lady, as the Indian's better half decides to do. He feels for her so that he can presently don't bear her aggravation and closures his life.' Hemingway makes it her experiencing that inconveniences the man.{{sfn|Tyler, Lisa|2006|p=38}}
The story gives Nick two options for reacting to ladies' torment-and the experience in this story is suffering. The primary option is to relate to the lady, as the Indian's better half decides to do. He feels for her so that he can presently don't bear her aggravation and closures his life.' Hemingway makes it her experiencing that inconveniences the man.{{sfn|Tyler, Lisa|2006|p=38}}
== Citations ==
{{Reflist}}


==Works Cited==
==Works Cited==
See also: [[/Annotated Bibliography/]].
See also: [[/Annotated Bibliography/]].
 
{{refbegin}}
* {{Cite book
* {{Cite book  | last = Hemingway | first = Ernest | date = 2002 | chapter = Indian Camp | title = Reading and Writing about Literature | editor-last = Sipiora | editor-first = Phillip | publisher = Prentice Hall | location = Upper Saddle Creek, NJ | pages = 28–31 }}
  | last = Hemingway
* {{cite journal |last=Robinson |first=Daniel |title=Cultural Appropriation, Acculturation, and Fatherhood: A Reading of ‘Indian Camp’ |url= |journal=CEAMagazine: A Journal of the College English Association |volume=28 |issue= |date={{date|2020}} |pages=39-50 |access-date= |ref=harv }}
| first = Ernest
{{refend}}
| date = 2002
| chapter = Indian Camp
| title = Reading and Writing about Literature
| editor-last = Sipiora
| editor-first = Phillip
| publisher = Prentice Hall
| location = Upper Saddle Creek, NJ
| pages = 28–31
}}
* Robinson, Daniel (2020). "Cultural Appropriation, Acculturation, and Fatherhood: A Reading of ‘Indian Camp’. CEAMagazine: A Journal of the College English Association, Middle Atlantic Group. 28: 39-50.
 
== Citations ==