This section contains 940 words (approx. 3 pages at 400 words per page) |
Was he in fact claiming this marginal perspective as his own?
-- Narrator
(The Stuntman)
Importance: G's wife is stunned by G's upside-down paintings because they capture something significant about being a woman. At first, she marvels at his capacity to render this ineffable facet of femaleness. However, she soon begins to fear that her husband is in fact claiming ownership of the experience. The line contributes to the novel's overarching explorations of gender politics, and develops the subtextual commentaries on power, possession, and control.
Sometimes a minor change can bring down a major structure, and this was the case with the lady's apartment.
-- Narrator
(The Stuntman)
Importance: The first person narrator of "The Stuntman" loses her grounding in time and space when she and her partner are forced to leave their sublet. The apartment becomes her baseline for reality and truth. Without the space, the narrator is unable to restore her bearings in the unfamiliar city. This moment...
This section contains 940 words (approx. 3 pages at 400 words per page) |