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Life of Pi: Author

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Life of Pi: Author s Note HKASL ~ Literature in English Summary The brief, italicized section: With some background on the book s author Written himself into the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Life of Pi: Author


1
Life of Pi Authors Note
  • HKASL Literature in English

2
Summary
  • The brief, italicized section
  • With some background on the books author
  • Written himself into the text as a character
  • 1996 second trip to India He flew to Bombay to
    rejuvenate his mind after learning about the less
    than favorable response to his first two books
  • Plans to write a novel about Portugal
  • Failed to materialize the book hopeless and
    dejected about his prospects

3
Summary
  • Arrived in the town of Pondicherry after a period
    of wandering
  • Pondicherry once controlled by the French
    Empire
  • Become self-governing decades ago
  • The author met by chance a man named Francis
    Adirubasamy in a local coffee shop
  • Francis offered to tell him a story

4
Summary
  • The author called up Mr. Patel Pi back in his
    native Canada
  • Mr. Patel agreed to meet with him and tell him
    his own version of the story
  • Showed the author documents, including his old
    diary and ancient newspaper clippings about his
    ordeal
  • Supporting documents received from the Japanese
    Ministry of Transport
  • Author to write up Mr. Patels account using Mr.
    Patels own voice and looking through his eyes.
    Any mistakes, he states, are the authors own.

5
Analysis
  • It clues us into the books origins
  • It blurs the boundary between fact and fiction
  • Claim the text is nonfiction
  • In the tradition of picaresque novels
  • ExampleDon Quixote
  • Masquerading as fact even though they are
    obviously works of imagination
  • Harsh realities of life poverty, illness, and
    so on are treated in a wry, ironic, and even
    humorous way
  • Serious commentary made by the narrator on
    everything, from religion to politics
  • Mock-journalistic introduction the intersection
    of fact and fiction in his literary world

6
Analysis
  • Central theme of the book storytelling
  • Two not-so-successful books before
  • Struck by inspiration during a visit to India
  • Did Yann Martel really meet Francis Adirubasamy
    in a coffee shop?
  • Does Pi Patel really exist?
  • No
  • Martel creating an imaginary scenario to delight
    and entice his readers
  • Foundation for the novels central theme
  • Storytelling as a way to get around telling the
    boring or upsetting or uninteresting truth

7
Analysis
  • Balanced structurally by Part Three another
    short section concerned with creating the
    impression that this entire book is a work of
    nonfiction
  • To suspend our disbelief and invest ourselves
    more fully in the story we are about to read

8
Life of Pi Chapters 1 6
9
Summary
  • Beginning Pis declaration his great
    suffering, leaving him despondent
  • The nature of his suffering and its source are
    not yet clear to the reader
  • Pi as a very good student in his religious and
    zoological studies
  • His religious studies thesis aspects of Isaac
    Lurias cosmogony theory
  • Pis Speaking about sloths at length and his
    observation
  • Their very survival ensured by their slow and
    dull lifestyle
  • Disappearance into the background
  • Now working, Pi misses India and loves Canada,
    and he misses someone named Richard Parker.

10
Summary
  • Pis stay at a hospital in Mexico
  • Treated exceptionally well
  • His ailmentsanemia, fluid retention, dark urine,
    broken skin
  • Up and walking in about a weeks time
  • Fainted the first time he turned on a water tap
    and heard the water rushing forth
  • How he felt wounded when a waiter in an Indian
    restaurant in Canada criticized him for using his
    fingers to eat.
  • Narrative briefly switched to the authors point
    of view
  • Describing Pi as a small, gray-haired,
    middle-aged man, who talks quickly and directly

11
Summary
  • Pis narrative his reflections on his boyhood in
    India
  • Named after a pool
  • Learned to swim from a family friend, Francis
    Adirubasamy, whom Pi calls Mamaji
  • Mamaji
  • A champion swimmer when he was young
  • Instilled in Pi a love for the ritualistic nature
    of swimming
  • His favorite pool in the world the Piscine
    Molitor in Paris it is after that pool that Pi
    received his unusual name

12
Summary
  • Pis father used to run the Pondicherry Zoo
  • Pi grew up thinking the zoo was paradise
  • The ritualistic habits of zoo creatures
  • The alarm-clock precision of the roaring lions
  • The howler monkeys
  • The songs that are birds daily rites
  • Defended zoos against those who would rather the
    animals were kept in the wild
  • Wild creatures at the mercy of nature
  • Zoo creatures a life of luxury and constancy
  • Pondicherry Zoo is now shut down
  • Many people now hold both zoos and religions in
    disrepute.

13
Summary
  • Teasing Pi received as a child because of his
    full name, Piscine
  • Other school children turned into Pissing
  • Trained his classmates and teachers to call him
    Pi
  • by writing it on the chalkboard of each of his
    classrooms
  • Briefly switched back to the voice of the author
    Pis kitchen in Canada is extremely well-stocked

14
Analysis
  • Foreshadowing something devastating and
    extraordinary
  • Approaching that nameless event from the outside
    in,
  • Providing information about Pis life before and
    after before getting to the heart of the tragedy
    itself
  • Building up the suspense
  • Allowing us to get to know Pi as a normal boy and
    a fully fleshed out character, not just as a
    victim of circumstance
  • Drawing readers firmly into the story we want
    to know
  • Who is Richard Parker?
  • What happened to him?
  • Pis memories of India

15
Analysis
  • Pis reference of his thesis on sixteenth-century
    Kabbalist Isaac Lurias cosmogony theory very
    important to the book as a whole
  • Lurias theory of creation
  • God contracted to make room for the universe
  • This contraction Tsimtsum
  • Followed by light, carried in five vessels
  • Shattered vessels causing the sparks of light to
    sink into matter
  • God reordered them into five figures, which
    became the dimensions of our created reality
  • Foreshadowing the main event to come
  • Sinking of the ship, the Tsimtsum
  • Giving Pi the room to create his own version of
    the events that follow
  • Five figures that make up reality for Luria
    five characters on the lifeboat (including Pi
    himself) shape Pis story reality Vs.
    imagination

16
Analysis
  • Zoo an important place in Pis memory
  • Pis belief system shaped by growing up in a zoo
  • Knowing about animal nature
  • Imbued in him the meaning of freedom
  • Zoos are places of habit
  • Chores that the keepers must perform every day
  • Examples feeding and cleaning the animals and
    their cages
  • Animal rituals

17
Analysis
  • Pi establishes early on the orderliness of the
    zoo and the comforting sense of regularity it
    gives him
  • Animals prefer the consistency of zoo life
  • Similarly humans accustom themselves to the
    rituals and abundance of modern society their
    own sort of zoo
  • Zoo animals rarely run away they enjoy the
    abundant water and food
  • Life in the wild a constant battle for survival
    a race against the odds and other creatures
  • Death a constant presence and possibility
  • All of us living in modern society zoo creatures
  • Defanged and protected from the wilderness
    waiting for us beyond the enclosure walls
  • Walls from which Pi will soon be freed

18
Analysis
  • Explanations of Pis name
  • As much text as his philosophizing about zoos
  • The watery associations of Piscine Molitors full
    name
  • Piscine
  • Pool in French
  • A derivation with pisces, or fish
  • Pi learns how to swim from Francis Adirubasamy
  • He gravitates toward water

19
Analysis
  • Pis name
  • Two functions in the text
  • Emphasizing the idea that a very strong swimmer
    like Pi might realistically have survived in the
    ocean after a shipwreck
  • Pi as an odd name that is has the ring of
    allegory, positioning Pi as a mythic or fabled
    character
  • The literal, mathematic symbol pi
  • An almost impossibly long number whose
    combinations never repeat
  • Symbolizing Pis long journey, with all its
    variations

20
Analysis
  • Amount of energy that Pi devotes to the ideas of
    rituals and routine in the lives of zoo
    creatures
  • Repetition he used to train his schoolmates and
    teachers into calling him Pi
  • Leaps up during roll call
  • Writes his full name on the blackboard
  • Underlines his preferred nickname, Pi
  • Speaks it aloud
  • Carries out this act in each classroom, during
    every roll call
  • To the point where his fellow students start to
    follow along
  • Indication humans animals
  • Repetition proves to be a very effective teacher
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