Reading Pointers for Sharper Insights
To better appreciate The Red Badge of Courage and understand its anti-war sentiment and importance as a novel, we need to look at some of the concepts and techniques Crane explores and employs:
- Crane's lack of emphasis on the importance of the setting, the characters' names, and the relationship between the novel and the actual Battle of Chancellorsville;
- Henry Fleming's psychological progression from disillusioned boy to enlightened man;
- Henry's change from a frightened deserter to a triumphant leader on the battlefield;
- the symbolism and irony in the novel's title, The Red Badge of Courage
- the literary elements Crane employs to heighten the fear, anticipation, anxiety, and horror of battle;
- how the various soldiers affect Henry Fleming's conscience;
- the novel's perspectives and attitudes about war, and how they vary between foot soldiers and commanders;
- Henry's difficulty in distinguishing between bravery and cowardice during battle, compared to what he has read about the glorification of war by ancient writers;
- the Naturalistic qualities of The Red Badge of Courage;
- how the introspective ending of the novel fit its general point of view.
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