Tuesday, February 5, 2019
Comparing Home in Richard Fords I Must Be Going and Scott Sanders Hom
examine Home in Richard traverses I Must Be Going and Scott Sanders Homeplace more or less people define home as a comfortable aspect which provides love and warmth. In Scott Sanders Homeplace and Richard Fords I Must Be Going the concept of home is defined in two unlike ways. Sanders opines that by moving from place to place, the meaning of home has been diminished. Sanders believes that Americas culture nudges every unmatchable into motion (Sanders 103) and that his longing to become an inhabitant rather than a drifter (103) is what sets him apart from everyone else. Ford prefers to stay on the run away. His argument is alivenesss too short to settle in one place. He believes home is where you make it, but permanence is not a requirement. Sanders argues that in our national mythology, the worst fate is to be trapped on a farm, in a village, or in some unglamorous labor union (Sanders 102). Ford is a prime example of someone who believes this myth. In altogeth er of Fords moves from place to place, he has been in search of something better. He says that all of his moving is a result of longing that overtakes me like a fast car on the freeway and makes me willing to withstand a feeling of personal temporariness (Ford 109). Ford acts on his feelings without realizing that he will just now be there for a short time. Sanders associates yearning for some new(prenominal) place as being wrong. He quotes Henry Thoreau saying, The man who is practically thinking that it is better to be somewhere else than where he is excommunicates himself (104). Ford does believe staying in one place is averageal, One never moves without an uneasiness that staying is the norm (110). However, Ford blames growing up in Jackson, Mississippi as his case for wil... ...t people Rushdie mentions here. Ford is the person who roots himself in ideas because he is perpetually looking for that special place but can never capture it. Sanders would rather commi t himself to one spot because he feels any one place is as good as any. Sanders gains this mentality based on the discoveries of Copernicus and that Earth is not the center of the universe. He believes, any point is as good as any other for observing the world (Sanders 103). Ford finds no truth in this statement as he continues to move toward someplace we badly need to go (Ford 111).Works CitedSanders, Scott Homeplace. Seeing and Writing. Donald McQuade and Christine Mcquade. capital of Massachusetts Bedford/ St. Martins, 2000. 101-104Ford, Richard I Must Be Going Seeing and Writing. Donald McQuade and Christine McQuade. Boston Bedford/St. Martins, 2000. 109-111
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