Analysis Of The Short Story The Warrior And The Captive By Jorge Luis Borges

October 7, 2021 by Essay Writer

In the short story The Warrior and the Captive the characters experiment a change on their identity causes by different events they pass through. He first talks about a warrior who died for a city that he didn’t belong to and them about and Indian British woman that abolish her home culture to embrace her new one. Through it, the author focuses on the theme “change in identity” by introducing two stories that make us reflect on how different events make them change their beliefs. In the first story of The Warrior and the Captive, Droctulft, as an allusion to many other soldiers, left his people and end up defending the city that, at first, he was attacking.

Droctulft was Lombard warrior fighting against Rome that, move by war, ends up in the city of Ravenna and remained so astonished by it that changed him. When he saw the city for the first time the narrator describes “Abruptly, that revelation, the City, blinds him and renews him”. Droctulft sees a new form of life, the city, with all the things he didn’t have in his old life, its temples, gardens and open spaces, and marbleize him. The vision of Ravenna changed Droctulft and he ends up defending and dying for the city he was, at first, trying to invade. When defeating the city of Ravenna the narrator says “He was not a traitor (traitors do not inspire pious epitaphs), he was a visionary, a convert.” From this point of view he his not betraying his people, he died defending something in which he starts believing when he saw it, the Roman city of Ravenna.

So, despite hit natural belonging to the Lombard society, Droctulft decided to join and died for a new city, changed everything he had believed in for Ravenna, just because that is what he felt it was the right thing.In the second story, the author focused on an English woman that was forced to move to South America and how she adapted and revel into the new culture through the perspective of another English woman, proud of her belonging. The Indian was an English woman that, despite being captured by the Indians and forced to do brutal things, she is offered to escape her graceless life and refused it. When the English woman finds the Indian in the forest drinking sheep blood the narrator claims “I don’t know whether she did this because she could no longer act differently or as a challenge and sign”. This statement shows how the Indian culture had changed the woman until the point she was betraying human principles and perpetrating this horrible act despite the fact she used to be part of the refined British culture.

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