Studyspark Study Document

Value Struggle the Struggle Between Essay

Pages:3 (873 words)

Sources:3

Subject:Business

Topic:Value Creation

Document Type:Essay

Document:#40266488




The use of various artifacts as symbols is also important in showing the transference and transformation of values in many texts. In Whale Rider, a whale's tooth that has been cast into the ocean serves as a symbol of leadership, and the protagonist's retrieval eventually cements her ascendance to the role of a tribal leader. Her positive arc moving away from traditional values is shown in her appropriation of certain physical symbols of this traditional value system. In this way, the protagonist both literally and symbolically adopts and yet transforms the traditional values of her tribe in order to achieve her own identity.

Artifacts are out to a much different use in Franz Kafka's the Metamorphosis. Of course, the arc that the protagonist of this story travels is also markedly different from that of the protagonist in Whale Rider; Gregor Samsa is quite happy his traditional role of a grown son in a lower-middle class family until he finds himself transformed into a large cockroach-like insect. Though at first he is still cared for by his family, the loss of his traditional role within that family eventually leads to his loss of value within the family, and his bedroom becomes a repository for all manner of discardable refuse and junk that is unwanted or underappreciated by the other family members. These artifacts are used to symbolize the lack of importance Gregor Samsa now holds in the traditional value system to which his family ascribes and of which he himself was a part just prior to his transformation.

Traditional values are becoming increasingly difficult to uphold and are increasingly counter to the values of modern society in terms of equality, independence, freedom, and the ideal of self-direction and self-definition. Whale Rider, the Namesake, and the Metamorphosis all deal with the issue of traditional vs. non-traditional values in the creation of personal identity and social responsibility in the modern world. These texts are by no means exhaustive of the different accounts that have arisen from modern and post-modern experiences and ruminations, but they are fine examples of the increasing trend in all types of cultural literature of the examination and dissection of the nature of values and their inherent mutability.

References

Caro, N. (2003). Whale rider. Buena Vista.

Kafka, F. (1915). The metamorphosis. New York: Penguin.

Lahiri, J. (2003). The namesake. New York:…


Sample Source(s) Used

References

Caro, N. (2003). Whale rider. Buena Vista.

Kafka, F. (1915). The metamorphosis. New York: Penguin.

Lahiri, J. (2003). The namesake. New York: Houghton Mifflin.

Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

Values and Beliefs: Transformation and Change Perhaps

Pages: 4 (1038 words) Subject: Sociology Document: #62455570

Values and Beliefs: Transformation and Change Perhaps one of the most interesting aspects of the human psyche is how one's personal values and beliefs can transform and change. Whereas, one previously might have imagined that one's value systems and beliefs were "set in stone," events, circumstances, relationships, and changing community membership can either slowly or suddenly work to change one's central beliefs quite unexpectedly. Although many individuals can experience a real sense

Studyspark Study Document

Value Digital Privacy Information Technology the Value

Pages: 4 (1893 words) Sources: 3 Subject: Education - Computers Document: #4368660

Value Digital Privacy Information Technology The Value Digital Privacy in an Information Technology Age National security concerns in society and the continual investing in Internet, telephone, text and e-mail monitoring systems by enterprises are reshaping the individual citizen's rights to privacy. For U.S. citizens and employees, this is particularly challenging to accept and is often outright rejected as this nations' culture has been predicated on individual liberties and an assurance of privacy. The

Studyspark Study Document

Value of Conflict in Fiction

Pages: 4 (1224 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Literature Document: #12486344

The narrator becomes repulsed by Bartleby and decides that he must be suffering from some type of mental problem. The less the narrator knows about Bartleby the worse things seem to be for him. He wants to make sense of things. He wants it all to make sense. The conflict arises from his inability to do so. The narrator is simply being human in his desire to control and

Studyspark Study Document

Value of Life Well, This Is Theoretical,

Pages: 6 (2072 words) Sources: 3 Subject: Mythology - Religion Document: #29931577

value of life? Well, this is theoretical, very general question may actually depends on whose life it is that you are talking about and how you define 'value'. Then again, it may be a meaningless question that may be rhetorical and a red herring since life may have no 'value' or no 'purpose' and may simply be that which the person makes it. Let's examine these questions from four different

Studyspark Study Document

Value Change

Pages: 8 (2614 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Government Document: #48056443

values that drive human societies change over time, and in many instances the political environment will reflect those changes. By the early 1970s, scholars were recognizing that there were significant shifts in the values of the world's most advanced industrial societies (Inglehart, 1971). The basic values of generations, he notes, change based on the "changing conditions influencing their basic socialization." The way that these changes are reflected in politics

Studyspark Study Document

Values and Practices That Comprises

Pages: 4 (1606 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Sociology Document: #39503238

The significance of the nurturance is normal in this phase, it is thus a formative phase suitable for imposing the principles of reformulation that are taking place in the business world. The nurture capital indicates a new strategy for wealth generation. It is a strategy that generates value for the firm and for the society that it serves. The nurture capital strategy redefines priorities and entails a language for

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".