Wednesday, October 9, 2019
Patrick Dwyer
Where The Wild Things Are As humans we instinctively feel the need and desire to belong. When we truly belong to something we achieve a sense of acceptance, love and togetherness. ââ¬ËWhere The Wild Things Areââ¬â¢ by Maurice Sendak is a childrenââ¬â¢s book that explores the concepts of belonging and in contrast, not belonging. It is a very simple story accompanied by large, rich pictures. The text and pictures complement each other, each enriching the sense of alienation for the responder. Max is a mischievous young boy who displays aspects of childhood irritation and loneliness. He lives in a world with limited freedom as he is a child.It becomes clear to the responder through the positioning of the character on the page, the vector of the boyââ¬â¢s angry gaze as well as the neutral, bland colours used that Max feels like he doesnââ¬â¢t belong in the world he calls home. The pictures at the beginning of the story are quite unengaging compared to the bright, richly te xtured pages that follow. This sense of not belonging leads to Max fantasising and creating a whole new world within his imagination. In this world Max is king, there is no one to tell him what to do and how he must act. In this place Max is completely accepted and the most important part of the wild things world.Max wears a wolf suit during the story, it shows the responder that Max is disguising who he really is and that the suit enables him to escape from reality. Whilst Max is wearing this suit he becomes a wild thing and he thinks that his behaviour is acceptable. Max is pushing his family away, but he is also wishing to obtain a sense of belonging, love and acceptance. He finds this sense of belonging with his new wild friends. Throughout the text, the composer portrays a range of emotions felt by Max. He finally gets what he wants, a place of unlimited freedom and acceptance, but still is not happy.He needs to be ââ¬Å"where someone loves him best of allâ⬠. So he return s to the comfort and familiarity of his bedroom, where his mum had left his supper, still warm. Framing is an important visual element of ââ¬ËWhere The Wild Things Areââ¬â¢ as Maxââ¬â¢s imagination grows, the illustrations get larger until they fill the whole page. Early in the book, before Maxââ¬â¢s imagination takes him to the land of the wild things, we see a hand drawn picture of a wild thing hanging on his wall. He has thought about the wild things before and has been forming a plan in his mind.Max has often felt like he doesnââ¬â¢t belong and has imagined belonging somewhere else, in an imaginary world where he makes all the rules and is king. The text regularly refers to Max as ââ¬Ëkingââ¬â¢, but he doesnââ¬â¢t appear to be enjoying his job much. He looks sad, bored and lonely and begins to long for his home, which is a place where he does belong. ââ¬ËWhere The Wild Things Areââ¬â¢ links quite closely to the set text ââ¬ËRomulus, My Fatherâ⠬â¢. Both texts contain an informative tone and both contain the central theme of belonging. Both texts use imagery to represent the sense of not belonging, which then leads to belonging.In ââ¬ËWhere The Wild Things Areââ¬â¢ the lack of belonging is shown through Maxââ¬â¢s escape from reality, but then the sense of belonging is shown through Maxââ¬â¢s desire to return home, to which he realises is where he belongs. This links to the set text ââ¬ËRomulus, My Fatherââ¬â¢ where the lack of belonging is shown through Romulusââ¬â¢s inability to reduce the cultural barrier between him and the rest of the community, but then the sense of belonging is shown when the community look at how hard Romulus works and therefore appreciate him, in which he belongs. By Pat Dwyer
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