If faced with great challenges would you choose to stick by your morals, or do whatever it takes to survive? This is the same question Piscin Molitor Patel or “pi” as he likes to be called faced. From being stranded at sea for 227 days, to losing his family, Pi’s story is truly extraordinary. Through the use of personification, similes and metaphors, Yann Martel describes Pi’s journey with great detail making a story that will truly make you believe in god. Yann Martel uses personification throughout the book to make certain details come alive. For example when Pi was on the lift boat he says, “a sound without shape or colour sounds strange”, (242). With Pi being the only human on the boat he yearns to have human contact, much to the point
Pi’s mind instructed him to hold on. All the forces of his body were aching him to let go of life but, his mind overcame. The author reveals the mind’s ability to subdue the human body and its needs by establishing Pi’s distractions. “I kept a diary. It’s hard to read.
People who take life for granted don't truly accept life and not reshape their identity, until they've tasted adversity and all the vast misfortunes and catastrophe. Yann Martel’s book “Life Of Pi”, shows how adverse situations can help shape a person’s individual identity and play a noteworthy role in one’s life by establishing one’s ability, shaping one’s values and beliefs.
Life is defined by adversity. One never truly comprehends the beauty of life until one comes close to losing it. We are put through many hardships in life, whether we are prepared or not, and we learn to understand and deal with those issues along the way; adapting to these situations could include learning how to swim or what animals eat. In Yann Martel’s novel Life Of Pi, Pi Patel is contrasted with the experienced sailor Deborah Kiley by entrusting faith, the use of his knowledge, and adaptation to the situation to overcome obstacles beyond his control.
The ultimate value of life depends upon awareness and the power of contemplation, but more importantly, the will to survive. It is the will to survive that establishes a sense of hope and that same hope develops a coping mechanism called faith. Faith can save one in many situations and it can make one’s appalling experiences bitterly satisfying. In Yann Martel’s Life Of Pi, the protagonist, Pi Patel, loses his family and homeland making him more faithful, which ultimately allows him to conquer his fears in the middle of the ocean, thus increasing his devotion towards his faith. Throughout his life, Pi struggles to survive yet manages to overcome many traumatic situations by using faith as a coping mechanism, which later allows him to heal from his losses.
Surviving a tragic situation is a true test of mental and physical strength. It is mainly the use of inner strength to conquer various obstacles through a journey that allow many people to survive. The novel Life of Pi by Yann Martel allows readers to imagine a young boy trying to survive a shipwreck using everything that he learns and experiences. Piscine Patel survives many things such as the lifeboat, dehydration, drowning, starvation and the island. The personality traits of Piscine Patel are what enable him to survive and the three most important character traits he possesses are hope, intelligence and perseverance.
For instance, as Pi seeks for comfort and a distraction, he finds it with “a diary. It's hard to read. I wrote as small as I could. I was afraid I would run out of paper. There's not much to it.
The novel “Life of Pi” illustrates the life of a character named Pi during his 227 days lost at sea. There is a strong connection between the author Yann Martel and the characters and setting in the story “Life of Pi.” Martel’s time spent in India was the major influence for this book as many of the characters and story are influenced by his experiences in India. The animals in the book, which play a major part in the story, are influenced primarily from Martel’s visit to the Trivandrum Zoo, which contains all the animals in the story except the orangutan. Religion also plays a major role in the story, which is influenced from Martel’s visit to India as he learned about the religious culture of India.
In the awe-inspiring novel Life of Pi, the author Yann Martel uses the color orange to symbolize survival and hope. Soon after the sinking of the ship, Pi expresses the significance of this color as it appears all throughout the lifeboat. He observantly states in his narration, “..the tarpaulin and the life jackets and the lifebuoy and the oars and most every ther significant object aboard was orange. (Martel 138)” Through this quote, the author establishes it as an indisputable fact that orange displays survival, for all the orange colored physical items that Pi describes aided him tremendously in his treacherous journey. Moreover, the symbolism associated with this color can translate to the characteristics seen in the orange colored animals
These lines are thought out by Pi near the end of the novel. Pi has been stranded on the lifeboat and is starting to lose hope and thinks that he cannot go any further. Pi turns to God for hope and strength as he has reached his breaking point. When Pi talks about the “low” this is a metaphor for the suffering he has endured and when Pi uses the word “high” he is referring to a higher power, God. When you combine the whole sentence “High calls low and low calls high” this means that not only do individuals who are suffering call on a higher power for support but the higher power calls on those who are suffering to have faith and believe that there is a light at the end of their suffering. Pi is desperate to be rescued and get off the boat
He describes how it was very painful for him when the tiger left him. Pi is sad and cried, cause of he attempts to do something impossible and failed: the use of human nature to understand the beast. For all the wickedness, humans do not want to see it. Therefore, humans make themselves find an explanation, incorporate them into the framework of the world that they can understand, accept them, and then live peacefully. The kind of things people do every day, such as “crime”, people always find a reasonable motive for committing a crime, either for money or love; if a criminal commits, a crime not for money or love, they would just simply do so to enjoy the pleasure of crime. People are afraid, they cannot understand them. Human nature cannot
Life of Pi, written by Yann Martel explores the relation between religion and interpretation. The author creates an open door for the reader to digest the story in a number of manners causing it to be diverse. Not only is the audience compelled to be empathetic towards Piscine, but they ought to be altered spiritually and mentally due to this author’s agenda, and desired plan. This holistic route of understanding this story is purely a way of interpreting the world we live in. In this essay, I argue Yann Martel opened the door of interpretation when he used Piscine Patel’s story to encapsulate a plot that in turn would provoke readers to a state of transformation in
In Yann Martel’s novel Life of Pi, the main character, Pi, presents two versions of his or-deal at sea: the first a miraculous tale of survival with a Bengal tiger, the second a disturbing sto-ry of utter human savagery. Although some readers may hold the opinion that there is only one true description of the events that occurred, I must reject this interpretation. Instead, I will argue that both versions represent strikingly different methods used to understand our world and Mar-tel encourages us throughout the novel to recognize how these methods combine to form a story that must be believed in order to understand Pi’s incredible experience on the Pacific Ocean.
The experience in the lifeboat made Pi understand that the same way animals are never free from compulsion and necessity is the same Humans are enchained in the territory of their minds and hearts as they are controlled, by their consciousness,
Pi must challenge himself throughout his journey – he eats meat, kills both human and animal, two things which he has always been opposed to prior to his life being at stake. His survival ultimately trumped humility, even for an individual such as Pi who is deeply devout. When Pi details his story in “dry, yeastless, factuality” the idea of a manifestation of survival instinct is born, highlighting how the will to survive will push the body to do things it was once incapable of. This exemplifies the theme even-more-so because Pi matches his own will to survive to Richard Parker. Although some may disagree that Richard Parker was physically in the boat with Pi, the very fact that Pi divides himself from the inhumaneness of survival shows the power of such an instinct to
A story of life, resilience, and awe is Yann Martel's masterpiece Life of Pi. In this book Martel splits the story of a boy lost at sea into 3 parts and if you look hard enough you can see the genius connection between all of them. Yann Martel connects Pi’s beliefs from part 1 to part 2 that life will always defend itself, animals are safer in zoos,and things always escape something not somewhere.