Discussion Topic

Motorcycle Boy's Liberation of Animals and Its Symbolism in Rumble Fish

Summary:

In Rumble Fish, Motorcycle Boy frees the animals, including the Siamese fighting fish, as a symbolic act reflecting his internal struggles and desire for freedom. The fish, kept separated to prevent them from fighting, mirror the gang members' conflicts and Motorcycle Boy's own life of abandonment and longing. By liberating the animals, he seeks to end violence and find freedom from emotional pain, ultimately dying with a smile, symbolizing his own liberation.

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Why is the "rumble fish" important and why does the Motorcycle Boy free all the animals in Rumble Fish? Is it related to his internal struggles?

I assume that the Motorcycle Boy sees a symbolic connection with the "rumble fish" in the pet store. The rumble fish are actually Siamese fighting fish--beautifully colored fish that must be separated from others of their species; if put in the same tank, the fish will fight--rumble--until they kill each other. The Motorcycle Boy sees similarities between the fish and the different gang members--including his brother, Rusty-James--who, without his interference, would kill each other in gang fights. The fiercely independent Motorcycle Boy wants to release the fish, along with the other animals, so that they can have their freedom, much in the same way that he lives his own life and encourages an end to the gang violence. 

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In Rumble Fish, why does Motorcycle Boy free the animals?

In the book, Motorcycle Boy seems fascinated with the Rumble fish or Siamese fighting fish in Mr. Dobson's store. When Rusty asks him why each fish has to...

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be kept in a separate fishbowl, Motorcycle Boy answers that the fish would kill each other if they were in the same bowl. He also maintains that the fish would kill themselves fighting their own reflection, if a mirror was propped up against the bowl.

After he says this, Motorcycle Boy asks a cryptic question. He wonders aloud if the fish would continue to fight if they were in the river. This rhetorical question foreshadows Motorcycle Boy's eventual actions in letting out all the animals in Mr. Dobson's store. As to why he does this, we can look to the text for some clues.

First, Rusty tells us that Mr. Dobson's store gave him the "creeps," with "all those little animals waiting around to belong to somebody." So, the plight of the caged animals symbolize a state of abandonment and longing, directly mirroring Motorcycle Boy's life in stark terms. In the story, Motorcycle Boy and Rusty were both abandoned by their mother in their childhood.

When Motorcycle Boy admits to Rusty that he had met up with their mother when he was in California, Rusty is incredulous. He wants to know how the meeting turned out. Motorcycle Boy tells Rusty that their mother was living with a movie producer and that she eventually planned to move in with an artist up in the mountains. From the story, we realize that their mother has moved on with her life and is seemingly oblivious to the turmoil and pain she had caused her sons when she abandoned them in their childhood. By all indications, Motorcycle Boy has found no comfort in meeting up with her.

He finds himself trapped in the past, with questions a self-absorbed mother cannot answer. So, his actions in freeing the animals are largely symbolic. He wants to free them because they are helpless and seemingly abandoned, just like him. He even takes the fish out because he wants to put them into the river, where he imagines that they will no longer have to fight. Perhaps Motorcycle Boy's supposed ignorance of the police officer's warning shot is intentional. He too, wants to be free from rejection, emotional pain, and conflict. The text tells us that Motorcycle Boy died with a smile on his face, perhaps because he realizes that in death, he will be as free as the animals he has liberated.

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