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Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Isolation in Another Country :: Another Country

Isolation in Another Country Another Country is possibly the only wise of its time in which every character suffers from a feel of isolation. alone the main characters share in the feeling of isolation. Whether the characters isolation is a resultant role of race, economic situation, or even sexual orientation, each characters life is affected. The feeling of isolation causes the characters to lose touch with reality. This isolation is evident in the news report of Rufus. Rufus is a young black jazz musician who grew up in Harlem, a young Black man fighting the system to stimulate his dreams. Later in the novel, Rufus reveals his inner turmoil. Rufus feels isolated from society. He knows, yet is unavailing to accept, the racial barrier amid himself and his only close friend, Vivaldo. Vivaldo is a accepted friend, but despite their friendship, Rufus has a constant feeling of resentment toward Vivaldo. Rufus is hag-ridden by thoughts such as No one dared look at Vivaldo, out with any girl whatever, the way they looked at me now...This is because Vivaldo was sporty (Baldwin 31). The racial isolation is compounded when Rufus breaks all family ties in order to abide his interracial relationship. Knowing his familys open disapproval of interracial relationships, Rufus decides to leave his family and cost with his girlfriend, Leona. Despite his deep love for Leona, her presence constantly reminds him of the barrier between them. She becomes, in his mind, a figure of the society that oppressed him. She becomes a symbol of the things he could never obtain in life. As his life becomes consumed, he plunges into the depths of despair, committing horrendous crimes against his loved ones. Rufus refuses the help of his friends. He turns to life on the streets and in the end jumps off a bridge. Before Rufuss death, Baldwin narrates His own loneliness, magnified so some million times, made the night air colder. He remembered to what excess, into what traps and nightmares, his loneliness had determined him and he wondered where such a violent emptiness might purport an entire city. (60) Vivaldo, a close friend of Rufus, deals with his own form of isolation. A product of dysfunctional Brooklyn family, Vivaldo felt he was never loved thus, he forces himself into loveless relationships. In these relationships he establishes a barrier between himself and his girlfriends. Vivaldo seems to be searching for love in all the wrong places--street corners and bars.

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