The Alienation in Liberation and Liberation in Alientation
The Alienation in Liberation and Liberation in Alienation
In spite of the fact that both Murakamiâs âThe Elephant Vanishesâ and Aguinaldoâs âThe Childhoodsâ convey each of their narratorâs struggle by unraveling the contradictions between their points of view against their pragmatic setting, both works induce to the theme of âalienationâ and âliberationâ through their own contexts as how the narrators will react to their respective crisis as each story progresses.
Consider the interesting movement of each narratorâs consciousness as revealed through their points of view in each storyâs plot. Murakamiâs narrator moves through the story by centering his narrations about the elephant and how other people perceives the event, then suddenly divulges everything when he states: âI met her near the end of September[,]â (Murakami 318) a statement that seems unconnected to the central crisis. However, the narrator fully reestablishes the connection of this diversion when â[he tells] her about the elephantâ (321) He narrates his testimony that the elephant seems to shrink while being tended by its keeper.
In comparison to Murakami, Aguinaldoâs narrator actually starts the plot by deluding the readers into thinking that the whole story was about his college life. Bumping with his college blockmate, the narrator âremember[s] [his] block [and] . . . the first day of collegeâ (Aguinaldo 3) up to his graduation from college; however, he completely divulges the readers into his true focus: finding his desired âthree childhoodsâ as how the angel has prophesized, and has been his motivation in looking through bookstores to find âthe 159th page of a bibleâ (5). But whatâs interesting in Aguinaldoâs narrator is he is actually a Philosophy graduate (3).
With regards to the latterâs work, the narrator possibly, although incompletely, establishes his own credibility through his background information. Of course, the readers can emphasize the most unreliable event in the text is that when the narrator claims that â[o]ne night ⊠an angel from the heaven . . . . [I]t spoke and [he] heard: âThe key to [his] childhoods lay on page 159 of a bibleâ (5). But then, considering that he is a Philosophy graduate, such motivations and testimonies intend to become philosophical and sophisticated for ordinary readers.
Comparing with Aguinaldoâs narrator, Murakamiâs narrator attempts to assert the truthfulness of his subsequent revelation by establishing his reliability and credibility as a âwitnessâ of the absurd incident. He has proved his familiarity to the elephant by saying that â[it] mostly ate leftovers from the school lunches of children in the local elementary schoolâ, breaking down the details of the city officialsâ debate prior to the acquisition of the elephant, and his seemingly obvious obsession