Preview

Response To Chris Mccandless 'Into The Wild: Response'

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
118 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Response To Chris Mccandless 'Into The Wild: Response'
Into the Wild Response

1. Chris McCandless was somewhat troubled, but I didn’t see him having mental health issues. Reading about McCandless’ early life, it looks like the transition between his mother’s first marriage to her second could’ve been what shaped some of his views. If anything, Chris McCandless was enlightened and knew what he wanted when he started his journey in Into the Wild. Being a fan of both Emerson and Thoreau, I believe Chris McCandless was looking to see the Earth as a transcendentalist would. Even when a stranger he came into contact with offered something to his benefit he would rarely accept. Chris McCandless wanted to do things on his own while on his journey.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    I agree with the author. Chris wasn’t crazy for many reasons. He was a very smart man. He graduated college and was planning on becoming a lawyer, until he realized something many wish they did. He understood what he was passionate for and it wasn’t law school.…

    • 361 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Chris McCandless, round and static character of commentary text novel Into the Wild is depicted as a detached young man contending solely with his own internal conflicts. Into the Wild is a non-fiction journalistic piece written by Jon Krakauer which delineates the events Chris McCandless encountered over a two year journey of self discovery, independence, and utter emancipation from materialistic society in the wilderness.…

    • 64 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Serious stuff, like he was baring his soul, kind of. He said he could tell me things that he couldn’t tell the others. You could see something was gnawing at him. It was pretty obvious he didn’t get along with his family, but he never said much about any of them except Carine, his little sister. He said they were pretty close". Overall I would say that Chris was ignorant, arrogant, selfish and a brave young man, simply because he was ignorant because he didn't know that some of the berries might kill him and these mistakes and ignorance lead him to his death, but overall for young who just graduated and got on his own in the wild I would say that he did a pretty good job on surviving for four months, "Said he didn't want to see a single person, no airplanes, no sign of civilization. He wanted to prove himself that he could make it on his own without anybody's help". he will always be remembered as a young brave man, who was seeking his own…

    • 814 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the book Into the Wild it explains a true story that had changed the the lives of many. A young man who all he wanted was to escape society and get away from the world. His life did end shortly after his disappearance. But that does not mean he did not live his life to the fullest. Jon Krakauer the author of the book Into the Wild describes Chris McCandless faults and traits. Chris is an intelligent guy but he finds a new meaning for life and wants to go discover it. He didn't have any contact with his parents but was contacting his sister carrie. Krakauer does a tremendous job of interviewing everyone who had anything to do with McCandless from his parents, when he grew up, to the people who found his body in the abandoned bus in Alaska.…

    • 286 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Chris McCandless was a young man from California who loved to be outdoors and was always very athletic. He always had the desire and ambition to do things on his own. However this was a positive and negative side to his personality because it would cost him his life by wanting to live this way. In school Chris was always a very smart student who had good grades and could have gone to college if he chose to. His parents wanted him to attend college but he felt it wasn’t for him so instead he chose to travel and hitchhike. This caused tension between the McCandless’s and adding gas to the fire, Chris’s father had an affair which angered him even more.…

    • 613 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    These are the two reasons why Chris McCandless went on his two year journey. He was a very rebellious young man, that loved the meaning of life. He was also intelligent, Chris had influences from different composers. He wanted to find the meaning of life by himself. He wanted to live free from communication and other people. Chris McCandless was a brave young man, to take on this…

    • 552 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Chris Mccandless Argument

    • 696 Words
    • 3 Pages

    It is said that Chris McCandless was a bright and ignorant person according to Cellarmans argument and maybe others point of views. In my perspective I agree but disagree as well although I agree with the argument that was said by Callarmans. As I state a quote that was said by Shaun Callarman “ had no business going into Alaska with his Romantic silliness”. As it says “Romantic silliness” he was meaning that he wanted to die in a poetic but as well as a beautiful surrounding of love and happiness. He traveled to find himself into the wilderness to figure out who he is.…

    • 696 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Also many people argued that McCandless was suffering from a mental illness probably like depression, however, there has been no evidence given that Chris was actually suffering from this. A third thing is that there is no doubt that Chris McCandless did not have a bound with his parents, he did not spend a lot of time with them, but have people considered the fact that Chris did not want to become like his parents, the type that have to work all the time and the type that do not have time to do anything else but…

    • 791 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Chris Mccandless Analysis

    • 471 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The most important place in Chris McCandless’s life is quite possibly the place he died, the fateful Fairbanks bus number 142. The bus is situated in a clearing in the Alaskan wilderness, surrounded by tall trees, undisturbed by the advances of modern life. While the painting is based on an actual image of bus 142, the vast emptiness of the clearing around the bus symbolizes how alienated McCandless felt by his community for his atypical beliefs. The brush growing around the bus and in the corner of the clearing represents modern views trying to invade his personal set of values. In the background, the fir trees represent all the different people in McCandless’s life and how powerful their influences on him. The bigger trees are people like Jim Gallien and Wayne Westerberg, both…

    • 471 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Chris McCandless abandoned modern world and choose the wild because he believed that he can improve himself through living in the world, and finds the true happiness of the life. McCandless abandoned his wealthy family because his complicated relationship with his father, and he was ashamed with his father’s adultery. Therefore, McCandless believed that human relationship is not a thing that forms happiness, and the connection with nature brings joy as well. He also believed the habitual lifestyle was what people meant to do, and people shouldn't have more possessions than what they need. For this reason, McCandless travel with little effects. In addition, McCandless thought he can find the solution to his confusion with the adultery of his…

    • 1126 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Chris McCandless longed for independence and freedom from the life he was living and embarks on the adventure of a lifetime. Jon Krakauer, the author of Into the Wild, begins the book by giving the reader a narration of his journey ,then shortly after changes into a mystery by telling the reader of a dead body found in the bus. The readers can infer that the body found is Chris, giving the reader a feeling that he was crazy for making this venture into the wild and doubt his mental state. Krakauer, then tells the reader of Everett Ruess, a young man who did the same journey and died, giving the reader his view on Chris that he didn’t go out into the wild, because he was crazy but it was more for his own good as a person. The author would continue…

    • 1472 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    First off, Chris McCandless is a celebrity in the transcendentalist community because of his search for the meaning of life independently. Jon Krakauer respects McCandless because no one prompted him to go out into the Alaskan wilderness, since most people need a push to do something. However some people believe McCandless is a fool and should be forgotten about and that he was spoiled rotten and was just wanting attention. The truth that most people do not know is, McCandless’s parents used to fight and the mom would call out for the kids to come see what the dad was doing to her. McCandless was a strong character and had gone through a lot. McCandless looked up to all of the major transcendentalists including his favorite Henry…

    • 782 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Although some may believe that Chris McCandless went into the wild because of inspiration, I think that his primary reason was due to his family issues and emotional damage. I feel as if he was trying to run away and leave his past life. I can agree with others beliefs that he was inspired because he did read many things and was very influenced by some writings. However, the apparent problems he had with his family caused this issue because he showed many times before that he didn’t like his home life. Others even saw that he was unhappy with his parents and he wanted to leave and live what he thought to be a more peaceful life. Not only was just his parents divorce talks, his arguments with his father, and his distance he felt from his mom and dad a huge problem for him, he also was emotionally damaged by other…

    • 862 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    He was an adept hunter, and while he “made some mistakes on the Stampede Trail, but confusing a caribou with a moose wasn’t among them.” (Krakauer, 178) something the Alaskan hunters who found him, mixed up. Those who knew Chris understood that while he might be idealistic, he was not a fool. Many letters were written to Outsider, after the Chris article, stating that Chris was ignorant and underprepared. “His ignorance, which could have been cured by...is what killed him.” (Krakauer, 72) While Chris was arrogant, he was not stupid. Chris just did not see things the way others did, seeing his Alaska excursion as “The great triumphant joy of living to the fullest extent.” (Krakauer, 37) A phenomenon of human nature is that we do not see things in the same way, and Chris definitely saw things in a different…

    • 509 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Chris was known as mentally ill most of the time; however that isn’t the case. The fact is mc Donald’s coworkers see him as mental because he didn’t talk to them and rode in the desert every day; however in reality McCandless didn’t have any reason to talk to them and he was perfectly fine. He seen those people as “”Plastic People”” (43), and had no interest in Talking to them. Others thought he was mental because he stayed distant and didn’t talk, but Chris wasn’t talking to them on purpose and he knew what he was doing, where real mental people don’t mean to be anti – social but that’s how it is. Chris knew he was being anti – social and had his reasoning.…

    • 495 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays