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What are some comparisons and contrasts between Jim Burden and Antonia Shimerda?
Quick answer:
Antonia is a Bohemian, who lived in the village of Shimerda. Antonia's father was a peasant farmer. She had two brothers and four sisters. They had come to America for new opportunities and freedom from religious persecution. Her father had saved up enough money to buy a farm in Nebraska with hopes of being successful in his new country. Antonia's father was the only one who knew how to do any type of work on a farm. Her mother, Yulka Shimerda, didn't know how to clean house or cook so she never did because she wanted her husband to think she was worth something in their relationship.Although both Jim Burden and Antonia Shimerda are new to Nebraska (they arrive at the same time), Jim is an American who has to leave Virginia after his parents' deaths to live with his grandparents. Antonia has traveled much further: she and her family came as immigrants from Bohemia (now the Czech Republic).
Jim arrives to live in a warm, welcoming home on the prairie, whereas Antonia and her family must live in a sod house after they are conned out of their hard-earned savings by a fellow Czech immigrant. Antonia struggles to survive, but she loves the land, and she and Jim play and grow up together. Jim's grandparents insist on his getting a formal education. He eventually heads to university and pursues a career. Antonia, after the suicide of her father, is forced to work in the fields and eventually becomes a "hired girl" in the town of Black Hawk, where she flourishes, attending dances and becoming a social butterfly.
Jim is a serious young man, while Antonia is more playful and carefree. Jim leaves Black Hawk for good and leads a full academic life. Antonia, however, gets pregnant without a husband. She finally meets a good husband (another Czech) and has many children, living out on the prairie she loves. Jim and Antonia lead different lives, but they continue to see one another from time to time and reminisce about their shared childhood. Antonia seems happy, but Jim expresses regret that Antonia was never his "sweetheart."
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