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Into the Wild By Jon Krakauer
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www.intothewild.com
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The Media “Death of an Innocent” –9,000-word article by Jon Krakauer appeared in Outside, Jan. 1993 Into the Wild novel by Jon Krakauer published 1996 “The Cult of Chris McCandless” –article by Matthew Power appeared in Men’s Journal, Sept. 2007 Into the Wild film produced 2007 Note: various other articles have been written in addition to television interviews and coverage.
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The Media
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Jon Krakauer “Adventure” enthusiast Experienced hiker, climber, and writer –Eiger Dreams –Into Thin Air –Under the Banner of Heaven –editor of the Modern Library Exploration series
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Chris McCandless “Alexander Supertramp” Decomposed body found in bus (Alaska) in September 1992 From affluent East Coast family Emory University alumnus (1990) Two-year “odyssey” from 1990-1992
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Quick Think #1: Future Plans Think about some alternative plans you might have instead of beginning college immediately after high school. What might you do, why would you do it, and how long do you see yourself in this activity? (Get specific!)
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Author’s Note 1.How long did Chris McCandless’ journey in the Alaskan wilderness last? 2.Immediately after graduating from Emory University in 1990, Chris McCandless dropped out of sight. What did did to support his “plan”? 3.What are some themes Krakauer mentions are the result of his “meandering inquiry”? 4.What do you think Krakauer means when he states “I won’t claim to be an impartial biographer”? 5.What reason does Krakauer offer for writing this book?
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The Naturalists’ Philosophy The Naturalists were a group of scientists/writers who presented a new way of thinking at the turn of the 20th Century. Jack London, Stephen Crane, Theodore Dreiser Beliefs Everyone is born with the history and knowledge of his/her ancestors. The knowledge lies dormant until factors bring it out. The Naturalists focused on the excess of “Human Nature.” Lust, Greed, Evil, Murder, Crime
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The Naturalists’ Philosophy The Naturalists posed as scientists. Foundation was based on Charles Darwin’s Philosophy. Everyone is an animal Man has evolved, but he has retained certain animalistic qualities. Survival of the Fittest Man possesses this instinct. True self is revealed once a person is taken away from society. Society = Laws and Reason Society governs our behavior. What if you take the person away from society and place him in the primitive?
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from Education of a Wandering Man “We are finally, all wanderers, in search of knowledge. Most of us hold the dream of becoming something better than we are, something larger, richer in some way, more important to the world and ourselves. Too often, the way taken is the wrong way, with too much emphasis on what we want to have, rather than what we wish to become.” Louis L’Amour
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Jack London (1876-1916) Born in San Francisco to a poor family As a child he was an avid reader, especially stories of real-life adventure As a teen he joined the “oyster pirates” and was a sailor Attended HS for one year, passed the entrance exams for UC Berkeley, but quit halfway through freshman year (did some writing)
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Jack London continued 1897-took off to prospect for gold in the Klondike (part of Yukon Territory in NW Canada), got sick, and returned in less than a year Klondike experience convinced him that “life is a struggle in which the strong survive and the weak do not” Short stories and novels dramatize his belief that “civilized” beings are either destroyed or re-created in savage environments –Call of the Wild & White Fang Millionaire, but an alcoholic, London suffered from kidney disease and depression –Pain was unendurable, so he committed suicide (drugs) and died at age 40
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White Fang The remarkable story of a fiercely independent creature of the wild. In the desolate, frozen wilds of north-west Canada, a wolf-cub soon finds himself the sole survivor of his litter. He is thrust into a savage world where each day becomes a fight to stay alive.
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The Call of the Wild When gold was discovered in the Yukon in 1896, Jack London caught the fever and rushed off to the northlands to try his luck. When he returned home, he had not mined an ounce of gold but brought back a greater treasure—vivid recollections of rugged life in the frozen wastelands. London converted his experiences into exciting adventure tales, including The Call of the Wild, which has been called his masterpiece.
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The Call of the Wild continued It tells the story of the magnificent dog Buck, who is a loyal pet until cruel men make him a pawn in their search for the gold of the Klondike. Brutally treated, Buck finds the blood of his world ancestors rising within him and breaks free to roam the Alaskan wilderness as leader of a ferocious pack.
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Leo Tolstoy: 1828-1910 Russian aristocrat Studied law and Oriental languages at Kazan University –teachers said he was “unwilling and unable to learn” –diaries reveal his “insatiable thirst for a rational and moral justification of life”
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Tolstoy continued Military experience, but later a pacifist and considered a “moral” philosopher –Influenced Gandhi and MLK, Jr. Drifted towards a more oriental worldview with Buddhist overtones, –learned to feel himself in other living creatures Realist fiction, realistic depiction of 19th- century Russian life –War and Peace & Anna Karenina
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Henry David Thoreau: 1817-1862 Transcendentalist “He seemed born for great enterprise and for command.” – Emerson (about Thoreau) Abandons life in society and moves to Walden Pond. Writes Walden. “The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation.” -- Thoreau “I wish to meet the facts of life.” – Thoreau His essay, Civil Disobedience, inspired the idea of passive resistance used by Gandhi and MLK Jr.
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Quick Think #2: What’s in a Name? How do names matter? Does it matter that we have the name we were given by our parents? What is the value of creating a pseudonym or new name?
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Boris Pasternak: 1890-1960 Russian poet and novelist born in Moscow to a cultured Jewish family Best known for his novel, Dr. Zhivago (1957) Won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1958 Presented Zhivago's inability to influence his own fate not as a fault, but as a sign that he was destined to become an artistic witness to the tragedy of his age. (War and revolution). “I don't like people who have never fallen or stumbled. Their virtue is lifeless and it isn't of much value. Life hasn't revealed its beauty to them.” – Boris Pasternak
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Doctor Zhivago First published in Italy in 1957 amidst international controversy, DZ is the story of the life an loves of a poet/physician during the turmoil of the Russian Revolution. Here is a masterful chronicle of its outbreak and chronicles: army revolts, irrational killings, starvation, epidemics, Communist party inquisitions.
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Doctor Zhivago continued Taking his family from Moscow to what he hopes will be shelter in the Ural Mountains, Zhivago finds himself instead embroiled in the battle between the Whites and Reds. Set against this backdrop of cruelty and strife is Zhivago’s love for the tender and beautiful Lara: pursued, found, and lost again, Lara is the very of the pain and chaos of those cataclysmic times.
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Quick Think #3 Can you already see any of the influences of these writers on Christopher McCandless? How might this discussion impact our reading of the novel?
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