Owen Meany Symbolism
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Owen Meany Symbolism
Mans questioning of faith and the idea of noticing what is there rather than what is not, is the central thesis of John Irvings novel, A Prayer for Owen Meany. Questioning of faith occurs when one fails to connect to beliefs and others. The key motif in the novel, that reiterates the questioning of faith, is the amputation motif. Beginning in chapter one, Irving introduces the motif and it inevitably provides the foundation for the theme.
In the book John desperately wants to avoid going to Vietnam. In order to ensure safety from the draft, he amputates his own finger. In doing so he cuts himself off from the rest of the people his age who are going to war. He begins to feel alienated and this eventually leads to him to move to Canada.
Another example of amputation in the book is the armadillo. Owen took the armadillos claws when Johnny gave it to him in order to illustrate how God had used his hands to be the instrument of Johnnys mothers death. At first Johnny was baffled at why Owen had taken the claws. He and Dan thought about it for a long while and then it finally dawned on Dan what Owen was doing.
Yet another example of John Irvings obsession with amputation takes place in the final chapter of the book. When Owen uses “The Shot” in order to save the Vietnamese children from a grenade, his arms are blown clean off from the elbows down. When this event happened Owens nightmare was finally realized, though not in the way he expected. He had seen himself saving Vietnamese children and dying from it but he had not imagined it would be in the Phoenix airport.
John Irving uses amputation as an underlying motif throughout his book. The purpose of this is to have a religious meaning. He wanted to show that through God, even a person who is missing a part of themselves, is