Assignment Week Ten: A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle (5 points)
A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle is the novel I
have chosen to read this week. The reason for this is that it grabs on the
concept of mental psychology. The main character, Meg Murry; who with her, her
brother Charles Wallace, and her friend Calvin O’Keefe, try and find her father
that is stuck on another dimension/planet. Meg goes through a lot of trails mentally,
and during the book that almost ruins her relationship with her brother. Due to
the story capturing the idea of the psyche, the symbolism is very strong and
hides itself in the adventure.
The symbolism of
light and darkness provides a metaphor for good and evil as well as helping the
book on a symbolic level with universal concepts of a moral compass. Children’s
change of that moral compass when losing a loved one. Light is a symbol for
good, knowledge, and clarity. Darkness is evil, ignorance, and obscurity. Another
symbol would be the IT, the villain and corruptor of the mind, stands for conformity
and authoritarian control. Showing children’s capacities for progress and
discovery as well as evil and destruction. IT reveals the dangers of trusting
intelligence over love and humility. The
Tesseract, the device that Meg’s father creates, stands for freedom, possibilities,
and discovering the unknown. With Meg’s mind still held onto logic rather than
having open mindedness, she is unable to tessering and travel to find her
father. The Tesseract challenges Meg because of their opposite mindsets, going against
everything she knows about math. Due to tessering letting the person to travel
from one dimension to another, this shows how scientific discovery may lead
paths that no one could have imagined.
Meg goes through a lot of trails mentally,
and during the book that almost ruins her relationship with her brother. Due to
the story capturing the idea of the psyche, the symbolism is very strong and
hides itself in the adventure. The three guardians are moral consoles, dark and
light, the IT, and the Tesseract, all play roles of symbolism. The story is
about being open minded but staying true to one’s self. To not be control and
pushed around by what others say is right or wrong, but to make your own moral
compass and standing up for what you believe it.
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