Sunday, 30 August 2015

Captain Corelli's Mandolin




Major Characters

Corelli

Given the title of the novel, Antonio Corelli must be treated as the main character, although he is not mentioned until ch.23. He arrives with his mandolin and is inseperable from it before it actually becomes a physical part of him. His love for Pelagia can be seen as an extension of his love for his instrument; when he finally returns he finds the mandolin first, which leads him to the woman. His character is revealed in his love of singing, which represents his love of life, his sensitivity and how unsuited he is to being a soldier. Another important aspect of his character, and manifestation of his humanity, is his love of children and animals. His enjoyment of Psipsina and playfulness with Lemoni, and the affection he earns from both of them, are early indications of his tolerance and good nature. His naivety about war and politics, his humour, exhuberance, impulsiveness and liking for jokes all give him an aura of childlike innocence. He is a Romeo with piles, and therefore a real human creation rather than a conventional romantic hero, despite the fact that the Italian soldier with a mandolin was a stereotype in the interwar period. His creativity as a composer and the pleasure he provides as a musician are in direct and ironic contrast to the destructiveness of the war and the cynicism and philistinism of the ‘great men’, the leaders and decision-makers. Corelli plays the role of the little man with a big heart and gigantic courage, those who make a different kind of history, the one which really counts: the history of humanity. He chooses to be a lion, not a sheep; he ‘remained a man of honour because he knew no other way to be’ (p.191). ‘Why not smile in the face of death’, he asks (p.396), quoting the epigraph poem by Humbert Wolfe. He acknowledges the debt to someone who has made the supreme sacrifice, as shown by his annual pilgrimage to Carlo’s grave. he can summon up ‘intimations of Eden’ (p.440).
Pelagia
A beautiful Greek maiden, virgin, fairytale motherless child and romantic heroine with rival suitors, Pelagia is a victim of the times. She represents Cephallonia and Greece; she always smells of rosemary, which symbolises remembrance and fidelity in love. She is Drosoula’s surrogate daughter and a reminder of his wife to Dr Iannis. She is a symbol of the ageing and suffering process, a repository of memories, an inspirer of music and a would-be Italian. She insists on putting the personal before the political and is ‘too clever to be a humble wife’. She takes on her father’s roles of writer and healer. Her sewing makes her an artist, and her art saves her lover’s life.
Dr Iannis
Dr Iannis is a saint, a saviour, a healer, a writer and a humanist (‘You shouldn’t trust to God for anything. These things are ours to ensure.’ (p.65)). Tolerant, with a sense of humour, he holds modern views on women and is a devoted father and grandfather. ‘he thinks that he is a Socrates who can fly in the face of the custom’ (p.129); he is a martyr to the liberal cause. He understands love and history, and is a wise village patriarch whilst also being unconventional. He enjoys an argument and the loss of his voice is a symbol of free speech stamped out by oppression. His memory is overburdened with the horror of the darkness of war and the barbarianism of his fellow countrymen, but he remains an altruist to the end, never sacrifices his principles and after his death is mythologised.
Mandras
The novel presents Mandras as a Greek god, an Adonis/Poseidon figure, a fisherman and a disciple. He is a dolphin lover and an Odysseus-like traveller. He is illiterate and an unworthy suitor for Pelagia; he is by nature a soldier, not a lover. He becomes a communist by accident, and becomes the victim of indoctrination and ignorance, representing the damage done by extreme politics. He has an ‘adamantine’ soul but suffers terribly in the ice. Mandras is a rejected son, a naive youth who went astray and lost touch with personal values. A would-be rapist of Pelagia and Greece, and an actual murderer, he redeems his life by his death. He represents the two-sided nature of Greeks and is associated with the dictators Mussolini and Metaxas (ch.13). He is the reverse of a fairytale prince in that he turned into a ‘toad’; he ‘lost his soul’ to history and war. He became ‘a shabby caricature of the man who had replaced him’ (p.447) and a tarnished hero destined for the void (p.451). He is associated with symmetry, ‘a property of dead things’ (p.215). Though linked to Christ, he is a follower and not a leader, searching for an object of worship.

Thursday, 15 January 2015

Greene and Burgess create conflict within the characters of 'Brighton Rock' and 'A Clockwork Orange' to highlight their separation from/in society. Respond to this statement - commenting on language, structure and form. 

-Amy, Tasha and Georgie

Monday, 12 January 2015

'A searching after truth is one of the most fundamental aspects of the story'. 
Post your analytical response here:

Wednesday, 7 January 2015

"Alex and Pinkie are both the same, evil innately and have been this way since birth."

Discuss this statement.

 - Ed Hobson and Ben Gibson

Sunday, 14 December 2014

Brighton Rock: what does it mean to you?

In Blake's collection of poetry labelled Songs of Innocence and Experience, he juxtaposes the naive, ignorant state of childhood against a corrupt adult world. He looks at the same situations through both perspectives with dramatic eyes, exploring morality, religion and sexuality. Blake's own views can be said to be outside both of these realms, not quite satisfied with either. Whilst Blake does explore the concept of innocence in youth, Greene portrays a much grimmer picture in Brighton Rock that develops Blake's initial imagery. He states:

it was like the dreadful appeal of innocence, but there was not innocence; you had to go back a long way further before you got innocence; innocence was a slobbering mouth, a toothless gum pulling at the teats; perhaps not even that; innocence was the ugly cry of birth.


Greene suggests that there is indeed no such a state as innocence; once you are brought into this world in an 'ugly cry', corruption becomes you. The simplicity of the descriptor 'ugly' exemplifies the candor with which Greene conveys this statement. When combined with words like 'dreadful', 'slobbering' and 'toothless' we are presented with a bleak outlook on the life to follow. Rather than celebrating an innocent birth, the imagery is reminiscent of old age and highlights the loss of control you have. This links to Pinkie's character in his oxymoronic quest for experience in the 'dreadful' Brighton underworld and want for eternal innocence in so far as his virginity and relationships with women. Even in a state of innocence, Greene portrays a useless and unappealing circumstance, later displayed through the frustratingly naive character of Rose whose inability to see through Pinkie's self-created projection of experience leads to her inevitable facing with 'the worst horror of all'.

Ultimately, Brighton Rock is a novel about corruption; it is a novel where the innocent become more ignorant - but this is only because they were never allowed to be innocent in all its glory. Do we learn from Pinkie and Rose's mistakes? Or are we tragically more alert to the dire state of innocence vs. experience, of uncontrollable corruption? Of the 'ugly cry of birth'?

Friday, 12 December 2014

What does 'Brighton Rock' mean to you? Use a key quotation to support your response.

Friday, 5 December 2014

The final countdown

Please post your response to your assigned statement here:

Tuesday, 25 November 2014

Rose is innocent; her actions are determined by Pinkie.
Do you agree or disagree with this statement? Use evidence from the text to support your ideas.

Thursday, 20 November 2014

Why has Greene decided to present the marriage and aftermath in such a way? Discuss, and use quotations to support your ideas. 

Tuesday, 11 November 2014

Why has Greene chosen to show the reader ‘paradise piece’?

Tuesday, 21 October 2014

Brighton Rock is made up of parallels. To what extent is this comment true?

Explore this statement through exploration of one or more of the following themes:

- Vulnerability

- Religion

- Betrayal

- Innocence versus experience

- Relationships

Friday, 17 October 2014

A02 paragraph

Type your A02 (analysis of language, structure and form) paragraph below.

Thursday, 9 October 2014

It is Greene’s presentation of the setting that is most significant in the opening of Brighton Rock. Type your improved response below please.

Tuesday, 7 October 2014

The theme of Nature vs. Nurture 
The way you are nurtured as a child is no excuse for your nature as an adult. Discuss this in light of Part 2, chapter 1 thinking about both Pinkie and Rose.

Thursday, 2 October 2014

Who is Ida Arnold?

Ida Arnold is a vivacious, larger than life woman who becomes involved with Pinkie's affairs after the murder of Charles Hale. Comment below on how you think she can be interpreted.

Tuesday, 30 September 2014


Pinkie

Pinkie, or 'the boy' is one of the key characters in Brighton Rock. Discuss the presentation of him in Part 1, chapter 2 below.

Wednesday, 24 September 2014


The opening of Brighton Rock

Graham Greene's Brighton Rock begins by inviting the reader into a world of mystery, murder and suspense. Brighton is home to a host of holidaymakers 'determined' to enjoy themselves alongside the fearful Fred Hale, motherly Ida and angry Pinkie.

Greene presents his readers with an opening of contrasts. Discuss your response to this statement below as well as the views presented by your peers.