We LOVE books and hope you'll join us in sharing your favorites and experiences along with your love of reading with our community. Registering for our site is free and easy, just CLICK HERE!
Already a member and forgot your password? Click here.
SFG, I gave no attribution, just cited the part of your post I disagree with and still do. What's your point? You post, I disagree with what you post. Are you saying you actually DON'T agree with your own post? Have you changed your mind?
Ugh, man. Read the thread. I don't have to write a dissertation. My points are perfectly clear and in direct response to your post. You didn't read the book, despite that you posted a bunch of ill-founded opinions (yours or not, you posted them), and I disagree with all of them--yours, sparknotes', etc. What about that do you not understand?
You wrote:
I've read a few summaries of the bok and the conflict between the Ramsey couple appears to be of central importance, though to me, that's too simplistic.
I suggest that you actually read a book before you start making these kinds of comments, because obviously a meaningful discussion about To the Lighthouse can go nowhere without that basic step. Or would you just continue to quote summaries and just guess at what you might think if you actually read the book?
Are you trying to have a discussion about the book, or is your aim something else?
Yours in bewilderment,
n.
-Did you not make a gross mistake and attribute the "conflict" thing to me instead of the sources I mentioned? On top of that, sources that I said were too simplistic?
You want me to say that I don't think there's any conflict in To the Lighthouse? Why would I say that? I have not implied that and I don't believe it.
587. Vision in "To the Lighthouse" major family conflict arises from Mrs. Ramsay's
domesticity triumphing over Mr. Ramsay's in- tellect; his "was a splendid mind ...
... diary for 27 April 1925 (12), the year before To the Lighthouse was written ... dependence
binds lovers to a dilemma that makes truth a matter of internal conflict. ...
... old James, the youngest son, who wants to go to the lighthouse on the ... is a
separation-individuation struggle, a surrogate-daughter-mother conflict between ...
... to complete her portrait is analogous to the expedition to the lighthouse by Mr ... is
finally left to Lily and ultimately the reader to bring conflict into harmony ...
OMG, are you out of your mind? Can't you understand English?
. . . no constant conflict at all
You're not quoting me there. What is that anyway? The SFG fantasamagoric mechanism at full throttle? What a machine.
Your 'distinct rememberance' is somewhat faulty.
Similarly, there is no ‘conflict’ between Mr. and Mrs. Ramsey.
I never said there was no conflict in the book.
Similarly, there is no ‘conflict’ between Mr. and Mrs. Ramsey.
Recent post:
A previous post:
Can you not understand the difference between 'no conflict in the book'--a broad statement that I didn't make and don't believe--and 'no conflict between Mr. and Mrs. Ramsey' --a specific statement that I support amply with my ideas about the characters???? Here we are at the heart of the matter. Do you not understand?
. . . no constant conflict at all