Thursday, November 14, 2019
Miranda Grey and Frederick Clegg from The Collector by John Fowles Essa
Miranda Grey and Frederick Clegg from The Collector by John Fowles    Miranda Grey and Frederick Clegg are the main characters that are  interpreted in the text The Collector, by John Fowles. Both characters  correspond to different classes in society. John Fowles uses the  concept of the implied reader, in which he 'speaks to' a specific  reader in mind in an attempt to have the story interpreted in a  particular way. Fowles expects us to read Miranda as an intelligent,  mentally independent being part of the upper class, but at the same  time, an arrogant "liberal humanist snob" (Radhakrishna Rao,  www.freshlimesoda.com/reviews/thecollector.html). The use and lack of  several literary techniques, point of view, allusion, and Heraclitian  philosophies encourages this intended response I hold towards Miranda.  Fowles' various writing techniques promoted the interpretation that  Clegg is part of the lower class and as a result is a victim of the  mind, unable to expand his thoughts or feelings. It is because of this  that he finds it hard to see between what is morally correct, and what  is not accepted. I found it difficult to respond to his character due  to the fact that the protagonist in most novels is one easy to  identify with, unlike the motives of Frederick Clegg.    Fowles' uses several literary techniques to enhance the proposed  analysis of Clegg. The first insights to Clegg's mental restrictions  are revealed as early as the first page. However, "Instead of  accepting everything that Clegg says at face value we must question  it" (The Collector: Wizard Study Notes pg. 11), and that is exactly  how Fowles intends it. Clegg portrays his information as an informal  account of events, perhaps similar to a description of hi...              ...n emotionally, which  encouraged part of my response to be out of compassion. Fowles intends  for us to question both characters and has succeeded in doing so.    BIBLIOGRAPHY  ============    Class handouts, The Collector: Wizard Study Notes, 1992, Wizard Book,  Victoria.  ---------------------------------------------------------------------    Moon, Brian. 1992, Literary Terms: A Practical Glossary 2nd Edition,  Chalkface Press, Perth.  --------------------------------------------------------------------    "John Fowles': The Collector" 1999, Pegasos, [online] Available:  www.kirjasto.sci.fi/jfowles.html    "The Collector", Fresh Lime Soda Books [online]. Available:  www.freshlimesoda.com/reviews/thecollector.html    Radhakrishna Rao  "The Collector by John Fowles", 2003, Green Man Review, [online]  Available: www.greenmanreview.com/book/book_fowles_collector.html                        
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