Indholdsfortegnelse
Summary
Essay
Optimer dit sprog - Læs vores guide og scor topkarakter
Uddrag
First, the short story “That Summer” (2015) is about how the narrator has this feeling that someone is going to die. At first, he has this bad feeling in his guts, but Noel makes fun of him.
Throughout the short story, the narrator and his friends observe Mrs. Walsh, and the narrator is fascinated by her body.
Although he likes her appearance, her family is catholic, and everyone finds them mysterious and strange.
Shortly after watching Mrs. Walsh sunbathe topless, Kim McCaig and Philip Davidson go missing.
At this point, the narrator gets the same gut feeling, that something horrible will happen to the missing children, but they reappear shortly after.
Later, Mrs. Walsh dies in a car crash. To sum up, the narrator’s gut feeling turns out to be right after all.
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The Northern Ireland conflict between the Catholics and the protestants created division between the citizens.
The political and religious roots that started this conflict led not only to social and political violence but sometimes even physical violence.
The protestant’s political beliefs and the Catholic’s religious beliefs influenced the children of the adults, which meant that a political family could not associate with a religious family at any costs.
In the short story ”That Summer” written by Safia Moor (2015), we are brought into an example of division, prejudice
and social violence from the children of the town’s point of view, and how The troubles, as it also was called, affected their town and childhood.
That Summer (2015) is a short story written by Safia Moor. Throughout the story, some main themes shine through, those being physical- and verbal violence, conflict, and childhood.
The short story takes place in Northern Ireland. The plot takes place in a period known as The Troubles (lines 69-79).
This period from 1960-1900 was a conflict between protestants and Catholics in Northern Ireland. This also explains the division between the town, and the Walsh family (lines 20-21):
“The Walshes were the only Catholic family in our red, white and blue North Down stronghold. There’d been no violence against them, although the possibility always hovered in the air. ”
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