Thursday, November 7, 2019
Trip to the Pole---Annie Dillard analysis essays
Trip to the Pole-Annie Dillard analysis essays    In her essay, An Expedition to the Pole, Annie Dillard approaches the tricky technique of      symbolism and metaphysical images to portray her thoughts on  religion, while avoiding the      dangers of making it too confusing, or too preachy.     Descriptions combined with the narration      of the absurd are effectively  used even without  informing the reader that her material departs      from their own expectations of what is real.  Her writing is filled with specific, memorable,      seemingly random thoughts that eventually develop deep metaphoric power.              On the whole, Dillard writes,  I do not find Christians, outside of the catacombs,      sufficiently sensible of conditions.  Does anyone have the foggiest idea what sort of power we so      blithely invoke?   This statement implies that institutionalized religion has somehow lessened the       true emotions and freedoms of nature and experience.  Perhaps the structure of an organized      religion sometimes require us to hide our genuine feelings, and replace them with what we are      suppose to be feeling, or following.                  Dillard writes in a sly witty commanding tone that shines a mystical light around ideas in      the most straightforward prose.  Even in the most surreal of sequences, we can still feel her      confusion, anxiety, and frustration. She writes,  The churches are children playing on the floor      with their chemistry sets, mixing up a batch of TNT to kill a Sunday morning.  Dillard, like her      fellow church-goers have come to this church in pursuit of the sublime, but the existence of many      banalities and contradictions seem to insult her sense of dignity.  She seems to be saying that an      individual would be willing  to sacrifice education, reason, and dignity for the sake of a glimpse of      the sacred and holy.  It seems like the church should be projecting a     ...     
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