
Originally Posted by
weezyhaahhh
One aspect that we pointed out in our class discussion yesterday was the Roy's technique of using allusions to several texts that our class has read in the last few years.
One text that was referenced was The Great Gatsby. When the group is leaving to go see The Sound of Music, Chacko quotes a passage from the novel. "'Gatsby turned out all right at the end. It is what preyed on Gatsby, what foul dust floated in the wake of his dreams that temporarily closed out my interest in the abortive sorrows and short-winded elations of men.'" (38). This passage relates Chacko to Gatsby with the similarity of their desires. Gatsby, a resident of the West Egg, owns a large house and holds party in order to try and win back his former love, Daisy. Chacko, on the other hand, pursues something else. When Chacko returns from Oxford, the West Egg/Western influence, he tries to control everything.
This is also related to the last book we read, Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad. Like Kurtz who claims "my Intended, my ivory, etc.", Chacko also claims "my Factory, my pineapples, my pickles" (56). Both characters attempt to use their Western influence to control their heart of darkness.
Allusions can also be made to The Poisonwood Bible. The twins, Rahel and Estha, can be related to several of the Price sisters. Obviously, the twins can be related to Leah and Adah, who are also twins. Moreover, a larger connection can be made to Adah. In Chapter 2, Rahel and Estha are said to be "precocious with their reading". Like Adah, the two excel in reading despite being quiet (especially Estha). Also, the two read things backwards. This can foreshadow that the twins, like Adah, have a different perspective of things with their disability of being twins. They are "Marked for Greatness"!