FINAL ESSAY:
The exit Badge of Courage By Stephen Crane
The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane is a exclusively unromantic and realistic story about a boys psychological turmoil as he experiences fightf are. Stephen Cranes office towards war is a distraught understanding of the irrational effects war has on human beings and one of disgust towards its vicious brutality. Stephen Crane reveals this attitude through the uses of the heat content Flemings thoughts and actions, through the characters dialogue and through living creature imagery throughout the novel.
Stephen Crane views the war as the suit of the irrational thoughts and actions expressed by the soldiers during the time of battle. Henry Flemming, when foot race from battle rationalizes his actions by making himself believe that he had fled... because radioactive decay approached. He had done a good part in saving himself, who was a little piece of the army and this is move because it is obviously his way to calm his conscience from his worries about fleeing (pg. 48). Although very unromantic, this description of Henry is very realistic in the mavin that this is the way that soldiers rationalize their actions, and in most cases war is the yard that many soldiers do think irrationally during times of war.
some other instances of this that are shown throughout The Red Badge of Courage are much more unrealistic like the time when Henry sees the dead soldier in the forest and becomes rooted to the blemish fear[ing] that if he turned his back, the body might spring up and suddenly stealthily pursue him (pg. 51). Obviously, this idea of Henrys is absolutely ludicrous, and it is the fault of the war that has somehow changed his thinking to such irrationality. Therefore, through the Henry Flemings thoughts and actions, the reader can clearly see...
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