Tuesday, December 24, 2019
Come Back to the Raft Agôin, Ed Gentry, by Betina Entzminger
In his essay, ââ¬Å"Come Back to the Raft Agââ¬â¢in, Ed Gentry,â⬠Betina Entzminger argues that at the heart of James Dickeyââ¬â¢s Deliverance lies the search for a lost masculinity in todayââ¬â¢s world, told through the lens of the protagonistââ¬â¢s canoe trip. He asserts that Ed understands the societal pressures upon each gender, forces that compel us towards the stereotypes that pervade our culture. Further, Entzminger believes, ââ¬Å"Despite the fact that Ed sees these constructions as constructions, he is unable to rise above themâ⬠(Entzminger). Ultimately, Entzminger posits, ââ¬Å"Ed dutifully destroys that which challenges his own and his communityââ¬â¢s conceptions of gender and sexuality, and he finds comfort in his return to his community at the novelââ¬â¢s closeâ⬠â⬠¦show more contentâ⬠¦More probable, Dickey meant to impose Edââ¬â¢s need for masculinity within his own life, his appreciation of a man whom you could, ââ¬Å"eve n see the veins in his gutâ⬠(Dickey 103), is simply Edââ¬â¢s internal longing for manhood rather than a repressed homoerotic fantasy. Edââ¬â¢s appreciation of Lewisââ¬â¢ toned physique represents to him what has been lost, an inner purity that he hoped to find on the canoe trip. Another major display of a shift in gender roles is the infamous anal rape scene. Ed and Bobby, who is the most effeminate of the group, are taken captive by two (likely) inbred woodland men. These men, pariahs to society, become embodiments of the defilement of nature experienced earlier in the novel, the trash in the river and the poultry processing plant. To Dickey, Manââ¬â¢s encroachment upon nature has not only led to the industrialization that plows fields and fells forests, or littered the wild with our excess and excrement, it has made humanity unable to reunite itself with nature. Once man has defiled a region with our technology and our influence, we may never go back ââ¬Å"Dicke ys novel suggests that there is no free territoryâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ (Entzminger). These mountain men have ostracized themselves from society, searching for a way to shake off the shackles of cultural expectation. However, in their attempt to become one with nature they have simply perverted it. The mountain men rape Bobby while Ed sits, idly waiting for his turn. Entzminger posits that the mountain men,
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