Preview

Cameron's Going Bovine: An Analysis

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
327 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Cameron's Going Bovine: An Analysis
The reader can gain a deeper understanding of the power struggle between Cameron and his Dad in Going Bovine by Libba Bray by looking through the marxist literary lense. Throughout the book, Cameron’s Dad has always been in charge and rules the family through an iron grip. While Cameron’s Dad is cutting the grass, Cameron states “Our eyes meet for a nanosecond, and then Dad stoops to examine a particularly hearty clump of weeds. As I back the Turdmobile down the driveway, he’s running the mower over the same spot again and again, forcing the rebellious patch to bend to his will”(Bray 40). This shows the power struggle because it’s obvious at first who’s boss. The Dad doesn’t even say anything but his glower just screams incharge. It’s the second

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Leon The Cow Analysis

    • 418 Words
    • 2 Pages

    This assignment involved the creation of a picture book in a pair. Max and I have strived to address the issue of the recent refugee crisis, through the use of various techniques in our picture book, Leon the Cow. The contrast of safety and peace between the refugee’s (in the book’s case Leon’s) home country and Australia’s was represented by the different colours of the text and the drawings. There was also a part of the story where the farmer handed Leon a sandwich, which was a reference to peace made between the farmer and Leon.…

    • 418 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Only Way to Have a Cow" by Bill McKibben tries to inform humans to decrease the intake of meat eating and how this habit could harm our environment. Cow would release harmful substance like methane when they fart or belch. These actions could actually lead to a bigger problem, global warming. Turning into vegans could make environment more friendly. Eating grass fed cows are more healthy that eating corn fed cows. However another problem forms, grass fed cows are more expensive then corn fed grass which causes people with low incomes couldn't afford to eat…

    • 97 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The lack of power and authority that revolves around Curley’s Wife is personified through her being referred to as either merely someone’s wife, or, through derogatory terms such as “tart” and “jailbait”, by the men at the ranch. Her lack of identity could be a symbol purposefully created by the author to inform the readers about the insignificance of a woman’s role in society during the Great Depression, and how men were far more dominant in relationships, leading to women having unequal, if any, power.…

    • 1953 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The 1930’s was hard time for most people who lost their money in the Wall Street crash. John Steinbeck tries to portray how tough life was back then in his novel mice and men. Mice and men also portray how power was abused and the way that it was used in the 1930’s. In the fight scene power is portrayed in many different ways physical power, financial power, collective power, emotional blackmail, status power and people who are disempowered. In this essay I will explore the ways that John Steinbeck presents power in the fight scene.…

    • 884 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In Lord of the Flies by William Golding the different views and beliefs of Ralph and Jack and the need for power in both boys’ segregates the group and the loss of innocence and humanity turns the group away from civilisation and towards Savagery. In George Orwell’s Animal Farm manipulation of society and breakdown of laws and class stratification, demonstrates the workings of a society as a whole and the different groups which cause a society to thrive or fail.…

    • 3264 Words
    • 13 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Machinery and technology are new advances society has yet to control oneself around. After the news came to the tenant farmer that his family would be kicked off their farm, the man who now took place of all the old farming families came to plow with his tractor. He was an old farmer of the land , who now was receiving three dollars a day to plow with the tractor. The man has no emotion toward his neighbors , he only spoke the words that he needed to feed his kids. When the man was given the opportunity to get pulled out of the failing farming market , he jumped at the chance. He had no control over what would be a better decision for his ex-fellow tenant farmers, for he would be plowing over their homes soon. The machinery got the farmer by the throat and tricked him into thinking he would be better off . Society often gets sucked into this fake world of technologies and machinery where we believe it’s all real and almost like a human life , but it’s not. “We all got to figure. There’s some way to stop this. It’s not like lightening or earthquakes. We’ve got a bad thing made by men, and by God that’s something we can change.” (Steinbeck 38) Men created the machinery that is potentially ruining the lives of hundreds of farmers, but the machinery is no longer run by men. Men lost control when the technologies became too powerful and society demanded more out of the creators. Machinery has no soul , or heart like a man does but it can still take control of people and situations due to the pure strength of it. Not like a natural disaster , machinery that men created take a lot more fight to take…

    • 726 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    I read the book “Going Bovine” by Libba Bray. I selected this book because I read another one of Libba Bray’s work which was a historical fiction/ fantasy series titled the Gemma Doyle trilogy. Since I liked those books, I decided why not try Going Bovine? I saw it on GoodReads and it got fantastic reviews. I also read the summery of the book to decide if it was serious or light hearted.…

    • 1646 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    This work is seen in the eyes of an activist for the party. The political theory in this book is the reform part I was speaking on earlier. The book is basically the struggle story of a typical working man at that time trying to fight for workers and fight to improve their living conditions, and to show their opposition on the wages being cut so low. The Americans that would agree to this story are the lower working class, who have no choice but to work minimum wage jobs that are barely keep them floating above the poverty line. In the story, one of the main characters, Mac, always speaks on the struggle which can be applied to what’s going on today as well. He puts the cause before himself, this teaches Jim on sacrifices, and is the backbone throughout the whole…

    • 1176 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Going Bovine Analysis

    • 530 Words
    • 3 Pages

    A reader can gain a deeper understanding into Cameron’s choice to escape the hospital in Going Bovine by applying Libba Bray’s life. When pondering if he should leave the hospital, Cameron says “How long till the pain medication? I could count the minutes. Go to sleep and not wake up. I could stay here and wait for the inevitable. Saving the world. That’s impossible. Insane. Still. A cure. I could be cured. That’s what she [Dulcie] said. And some little atoms come awake inside me, swirling into a question I can’t shake: “Why the hell not?” I could have a chance. And a chance is better than nothing”(Bray 123). In an interview done with Libba Bray, when asked about the car accident that she was in that broke almost everything on her face especially her eye, she states…

    • 530 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Dewey Dell is the character that relates most with the family cow. The cow just like Dewey Dell has something inside of them. The cow lows at the foot of the bluff. She nuzzles at me, snuffing, blowing her breath in a sweet, hot blast, through my dress, against my nakedness, moaning. ‘You got to wait a little while. Then I’ll tend to you,’” (Faulkner, 61). The milk inside the cows body is related to the baby growing inside of Dewey Dell. The milk is symbolic of the thing inside her body. “The cow nuzzles at me moaning. ‘You’ll just have to wait. What you got in you aint nothing to what I got in me, even if you are a woman too,’” (Faulkner, 63). Even though Dewey Dell is pregnant now she finds that she has to be the maternal figure in the house. “’You go on to the house and get your supper.’ He draws back. I hold him. ‘You quit now. You leave me be,’” (Faulkner,…

    • 663 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The distribution of authority established on the farm sets employees and family right into a slot, but Curley’s wife ranks higher than Crooks and in reality she would fall below him. Back in the day, women represented temptation of evil and terrible due to sleeping around. After plummeting out of a relationship between an actor and Curley’s wife, she sprang into marrying Curley to prevent loneliness, since she married Curley it meant enabling herself to obtain dominance. Curley’s wife declared, “...I could get you strung up on a tree so easy it ain’t even funny” (81). Death threats sail out of Curley’s wife’s mouth not even troubled hiding how badly she appears and proves the world must support entirely her. “For a moment she stood over him as though waiting for him to move so that she could whip at him again” (81). Violence authorises her point clearly to Crooks because weakness creates a monster of herself exploiting cruelty as moving muscles in her body. Minutes before the Curley’s wife emerged into the room, Crooks began to open up to Candy and Lennie concerning his life, but as soon as she broke into his room to insult him, Crooks shut everyone out again believing that mankind doesn’t acknowledge kindness into one’s heart. Anybody on the ranch exploits a style of cruelty, but the weak one’s value this for their…

    • 857 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Bully In Of Mice And Men

    • 1114 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Curley is a bully that uses his power to keep others below him because he is small and insecure. Although Curley is a fighter he has glove, “fulla Vaseline,” (steinback 27). To mask that insecurity Curley must appear strong threaten others because his father is the boss of the ranch. With this power, Curley keeps the other men below him. Curley does seems like fighter but he is insecure about pleasing his wife. Crooks is a black stable man with a back that is crooked. However when he is given power just for a second he abuses, “‘I said s’pose George went into town tonight and you never heard of him no more.’ Crooks pressed on for a private victory,” (Steinback 71). Crooks wants to be better but he does not realize torturing others does not get one things in life. Men perform their actions for their own benefit. The narrator in “To a Mouse” recognizes that and apologized for “man’s domination has broken Nature’s social union,” (Burns 7-8). The harmony that has been broken between not only nature and men, but men with each other makes other distrustful. With that distrust, men make each other suffer. Like how mice in the poem are suffering because they are “inferior”. Like the men must make the inferior suffer but, “What then? Poor little beast, you must live,” (Burns 13-15). This represents that the men must beat each other up and have their own role to survive on the ranch. All the men suffer but fail to comfort each other. The men fail to recognize that they are not alone. Fortunately for the mouse, it lives in the present but men must suffer. Men live in the dreadful past and fearful future. With the predatory nature of men, men may ot learn to know how to comfort one another, even the…

    • 1114 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Though the US had already granted women the basic right of suffrage by the 1930s, women are nonetheless represented in the novella as mere specimens at which to look; they still fall short of the social level held by men. Curley’s wife personifies the victim of this disparity: she is the cook, the cleaner, and, to some of the men’s pleasure, someone who “[doesn’t hide much.]” They hold a mostly disapproving attitude toward her, assuming that when she spontaneously drops in and “[throws her hips forward,”] she is only seeking attention. To reword, Curley’s wife and women at large are belittled. Another social issue is race. Crooks epitomizes the marginalization of the American black, which echoed for decades after the 19th-century civil rights movement into the 20th century. His dwelling is avoided, his company is ignored, and he becomes the scapegoat of every accusation on the ranch. He is referred to, impudently, as “nigger.” He is portrayed multiple times rubbing cream on his back, and it is left up to the audience to deduce what kind of abuse causes him to have to do this. The injustices against Crooks do not end. The theme of social prejudices against women and blacks are maximally developed through the characters of Curley’s wife and…

    • 877 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    that in 1882 that brought nearly $9.82 per hundredweight in Chicago were now bringing only $1.00.” The blizzard changed the cattle industry in Wyoming and throughout the United States, however there were several men not only in the Wyoming Territory, but also in New York that hoped to breathe air back into the dying business. That year in New York, which served as the headquarters the American Cattle Trust, was formed. Thomas Sturgis, who was already serving as Secretary of the Wyoming Stock Growers Association now took the position of Chairman on the board of the trust. Francis E. Warren a rancher himself, a former Mayor of Cheyenne the first governor of the state of Wyoming and a senator of the state was the manager of the American…

    • 934 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Ranch Girl

    • 1076 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The story is told in second person, which gives the reader a sense of being in the story, at the same time being an observer. It begins with telling you where you stand in the socio-economics’ and in the eyes of your peers. “If you’re white, and you’re not rich or poor but somewhere in the middle, it’s hard to have worse luck than be born a girl on the Ranch. It doesn’t matter if your father is the foreman or the rancher – you’re still a ranch girl, and you’ve been dealt a bad hand.” (551)…

    • 1076 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays