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The Life of Pi (Chapters 7

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The Life of Pi (Chapters 7 20) Summary and Analysis Chapter Summary: Pi s Teacher Pi s Pondicherry narrative His favorite teacher, Mr. Satish Kumar (an ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Life of Pi (Chapters 7


1
The Life of Pi(Chapters 7 20)
  • Summary and Analysis

2
Chapter Summary Pis Teacher
  • Pis Pondicherry narrative
  • His favorite teacher, Mr. Satish Kumar (an
    atheist communist with whom Pi feels a deep
    kinship)
  • Atheists simply people of a different faith,
    with strong beliefs
  • It is agnostics, full of doubt and uncertainty
    and devoid of faith, whom Pi cannot stomach.

3
Chapter Summary The Pondicherry Zoo
  • Pis father having fed a live goat to a caged
    tiger in front of Pi and his brother, Ravi
  • Purpose show them about the danger posed by wild
    animals.
  • Irony, the most dangerous animal of all is man
    (according to a sign in the zoo)
  • Flight distance the minimum distance at which
    an animal will tolerate a potential predator or
    enemy

4
Chapter Summary The Pondicherry Zoo
  • Keys to the smooth running of a zoo
  • Getting animals used to the presence of humans
  • Creating a good enclosure
  • Providing food and water
  • Knowing each animal well.
  • Taken care of in this way, zoo animals rarely if
    ever run back to the wild. On the exceptional
    occasions when they do, it is usually because
    someone or something has invaded their territory
    and frightened them away

5
Chapter Summary The Pondicherry Zoo
  • Territoriality Animals are fiercely defensive of
    their particular area
  • They also respect the territory of other
    creatures, (Thats why lion tamers enter the cage
    first, establishing their dominance before the
    lions are brought in)
  • Why do socially inferior animalsomega
    animalstend to be the most obedient, loyal, and
    faithful to their masters?
  • They have the most to gain from a good
    relationship with an alpha creature.

6
Chapter Summary Religion Diversity
  • Religion diversity of Pi
  • Hindu, Christian, and Islamic paintings, statues,
    devotional articles, photographs, clothes, and
    books in Pis house
  • He keeps the Bible on his nightstand
  • Born into Hinduism (becoming involved in its
    rites and rituals as an infant constant hunger
    for Prasad, a Hindu offering to God, and the way
    his hands automatically move into prayer
    position)

7
Chapter Summary Religion Diversity
  • Hindu philosophy of life, which Pi embraces
    That which sustains the universe beyond thought
    and language, and that which is at the core of us
    and struggles for expression, is the same thing.

8
Chapter Summary Religion Diversity
  • Coming across a church when Pi was 14
  • Father Martin told him the story of Christ on the
    cross, which Pi found very strange.
  • When asked to hear another story, Father Martin
    responded that Christianity has only one story
    (Crux love)
  • Pi decided to become a Christian
  • Father Martin told him he already was

9
Chapter Summary Religion Diversity
  • Pi became a Muslim at 15
  • Pi met a Muslim baker and mystic, a second Mr.
    Satish Kumar
  • Pi watched him praying and returned later to ask
    the baker about his religion
  • Baker Islam is about the Beloved
  • Pi began to pray with Mr. Kumar and to visit a
    local mosque.

10
Analysis Pis Religious Faith
  • A section about religious rites and rituals
  • Many examples of pious routine from Christian
    church-going to Muslim prayer and chanting
  • Objects that lend comfort to the faithful on a
    daily basis
  • Paintings of religious figures (Christ on the
    cross or of Lord Ganesha)
  • Devotional articles (Sticks of incense and a
    copper spoon)

11
Analysis Pis Religious Faith
  • Central message religion is a method humans have
    developed of making their lives more pleasurable,
    more meaningful, and more understandable.
  • There is more to faith than ritual
  • Without something bigger and more significant, a
    religious custom is a hollow act
  • Miracles of Jesus Christ minor magic, on the
    order of card tricks
  • Muslim prayer hot-weather yoga for the
    Bedouins.

12
Analysis Pis Religious Faith
  • Gained a true understanding of and appreciation
    for the heart and soul of each religious faith
  • Once he embraces the essence of each religion, he
    embraces their rituals with enthusiasm as well.

13
Analysis Intersection of zoology and religion
  • Pi studies both subjects at college
  • Chapters on zoology are interspersed throughout
    Part One with chapters on religion and philosophy
  • Multiple references to the ways in which zoos are
    like religion both are in peoples bad graces
    these days, because of prevailing notions about
    freedom.
  • People sometimes resist what they perceive as
    constraints on their liberty.

14
Analysis Intersection of zoology and religion
  • Religion (with its many dictates and rules)
    Intrusions on personal freedoms.
  • Pis defense on religion the very definition of
    freedom
  • What life would be like without religion
  • Life inside the walls, as it were, is cozy and
    comfortable, and people prefer not to leave life
    outside is bleak by comparison.

15
Analysis Ferocity of Tigers and Territoriality
of Animals
  • Pis father allows a tiger to attack a goat in
    front of his two sons
  • Never get too close to the tiger cage
  • Message Wild animals, even if theyve been
    domesticated and trained, are still wild animals
    at heart.
  • Their intrinsic nature is deep-seated and always
    ready to boil up to the surface

16
Analysis The tiger-and-goat chapter
  • The dramatic violence of the killing
  • Leads naturally to Pis declaration on his
    religious belief
  • Christianity great violence
  • Islam even greater violence

17
Analysis The tiger-and-goat chapter
  • Connection the feral acts of wild creatures VS
    the sadistic brutality that humans have inflicted
    upon other humans for centuries, often because of
    religious conflicts
  • Puzzle certain religious tenets that seem to go
    against the foundation of love
  • E.g. Gods decree that Christ be punished for
    mans sins
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