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Life of Pi: Close Reading

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Title: Life of Pi: Close Reading


1
Life of Pi Close Reading
2
Close Reading Practice1. Genre eg. Novel
or Poetry science fiction, romance, realism,
magic realism 2. Point of View/Narrative
Perspective eg. first person, third person
(fixed or unfixed), third person omniscient
intrusive narrator, unreliable narrator,
dialogue 3. Tone/Mood eg. ironic, satiric,
parodic, sentimental4. Image/Text Relations5.
Page Design eg. typeface, white space,
etc6. Objects7. Figures of Speech eg.
simile, metaphor, metonymy, dead metaphor, etc
8. Style eg. diction accented speech
complex syntax
3
  • Passage 1. Chapter 58 pg. 184
  • I pulled out the survival manual. Its pages were
    still wet. I turned them carefully. The manual
    was written by a British Royal Navy commander.
    It contained a wealth of practical information on
    surviving at sea after a shipwreck. It included
    survival tips such as
  • Always read instructions carefully.
  • Do not drink urine. Or sea water. Or bird
    blood.
  • Do not eat jellyfish. Or fish that are armed
    with spikes. Or that have parrot-like beaks. Or
    that puff up like balloons.
  • Pressing the eyes of fish will paralyze them.
  • The body can be a hero in battle. If a castaway
    is injured, beware of well-meaning but
    ill-founded medical treatment. Ignorance is the
    worst doctor, while rest and sleep are the best
    nurses.
  • Put up your feet at least five minutes every
    hour.
  • Unnecessary exertion should be avoided. But an
    idle mind tends to sink, so the mind should be
    kept occupied with whatever light distraction may
    suggest itself. Playing card games, Twenty
    Questions and I Spy With My Little Eye are
    excellent forms of simple recreation. Community
    singing is another sure-fire way to lift the
    spirits. Yarn spinning is also highly
    recommended.
  • Green water is shallower than blue water.

4
  • Passage 2. Chapter 31 pg.93
  • Mr. and Mr. Kumar looked delighted.
  • A zebra, you say? said Mr. Kumar.
  • Thats right, I replied. It belongs to the
    same family as the ass and the horse.
  • The Rolls-Royce of equids, said Mr. Kumar.
  • What a wondrous creature, said Mr. Kumar.
  • This ones a Grants zebra, I said.
  • Mr. Kumar said, Equus burchelli boehmi.
  • Mr. Kumar said, Allahu akbar.
  • I said, Its very pretty.

5
  • Passage 2. Chapter 31 pg.93
  • Mr. and Mr. Kumar looked delighted.
  • A zebra, you say? said Mr. Kumar.
  • Thats right, I replied. It belongs to the
    same family as the ass and the horse.
  • The Rolls-Royce of equids, said Mr. Kumar.
  • What a wondrous creature, said Mr. Kumar.
  • This ones a Grants zebra, I said.
  • Mr. Kumar said, Equus burchelli boehmi.
  • Mr. Kumar said, Allahu akbar.
  • I said, Its very pretty.

6
Passage 3. Chapter 45 pg. 133The zebras
broken leg was missing. The hyena had bitten it
off and dragged it to the stern, behind the
zebra. A flap of skin hung limply over the raw
stump. Blood was still dripping. The victim
bore its suffering patiently, without showy
remonstrations. A slow and constant grinding of
its teeth was the only visible sign of distress.
Shock, revulsion, and anger surged through me. I
felt intense hatred for the hyena. I thought of
doing something to kill it. But I did nothing.
And my outrage was short-lived. I must be honest
about that. I didnt have pity to spare for long
for the zebra. When your own life is threatened,
your sense of empathy is blunted by a terrible,
selfish hunger for survival. It was sad that it
was suffering so muchand being such a big,
strapping creature it wasnt at the end of its
ordealbut there was nothing that I could do
about it. I felt pity and then I moved on. This
is not something I am proud of. I am sorry that
I was so callous about the matter. I have not
forgotten that poor zebra and what it went
through. Not a prayer goes by that I dont think
of it.
7
Passage 3. Chapter 45 pg. 133The zebras
broken leg was missing. The hyena had bitten it
off and dragged it to the stern, behind the
zebra. A flap of skin hung limply over the raw
stump. Blood was still dripping. The victim
bore its suffering patiently, without showy
remonstrations. A slow and constant grinding of
its teeth was the only visible sign of distress.
Shock, revulsion, and anger surged through me. I
felt intense hatred for the hyena. I thought of
doing something to kill it. But I did nothing.
And my outrage was short-lived. I must be honest
about that. I didnt have pity to spare for long
for the zebra. When your own life is threatened,
your sense of empathy is blunted by a terrible,
selfish hunger for survival. It was sad that it
was suffering so muchand being such a big,
strapping creature it wasnt at the end of its
ordealbut there was nothing that I could do
about it. I felt pity and then I moved on. This
is not something I am proud of. I am sorry that
I was so callous about the matter. I have not
forgotten that poor zebra and what it went
through. Not a prayer goes by that I dont think
of it.
8
  • Passage 4. Chapter 34 pgs. 99-100
  • A deputation of three Americans came. I was
    very curious. I had never seen real live
    Americans. They were pink, fat, friendly, very
    competent and sweated profusely. They examined
    our animals. They put most of them to sleep and
    then applied stethoscopes to hearts, examined
    urine and feces as if horoscopes, drew blood in
    syringes and analyse it, fondled humps and bumps,
    tapped teeth, blinded eyes with flashlights,
    pinched skins, stroked and pulled hairs. Poor
    animals. They must have thought they were being
    drafted into the U.S. Army. We got big smiles
    from the Americans and bone-crushing handshakes.
  • The result was that the animals, like us, got
    their working papers. They were future Yankees,
    and we, future Canucks.

9
  • Passage 5. Chapter 1 pgs. 3-4
  • Is this passage funny? How does the humour
    fail, or how does it succeed?
  • There are two-toed sloths and there are three
    toed-sloths, the case being determined by the
    forepaws of the animals, since all sloths have
    three claws on their hind paws. I had the great
    luck one summer of studying the three-toed sloth
    in situ in the equatorial jungles of Brazil. It
    is a highly intriguing creature. Its only real
    habit is indolence. It sleeps or rests on
    average twenty hours a day. Our team tested the
    sleep habits of five wild three-toed sloths by
    placing on their heads, in the early evening
    after they had fallen asleep, bright red plastic
    dishes filled with water. We found them still in
    place late the next morning, the water of the
    dishes swarming with insects. The sloth is at
    its busiest at sunset, using the word busy here
    in the most relaxed sense. It moves through the
    bough of a tree in its characteristic upside-down
    position at the speed of roughly 400 meters an
    hour. On the ground, it crawls to its next tree
    at the rate of 250 meters an hour, when
    motivated, which is 440 times slower than a
    motivated cheetah. Unmotivated, it covers four
    to five meters in an hour.
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