Countess bunker Bell English 3B 11/7/16 Socratic seminar Part 1 Level 1- what was Pete trying to accomplish by making Louie run? Leve 2- when Louie has been at sea for approximately 3 weeks, what causes him to hide from the Japanize plains shooting at him? Level 3- Louie has no love interest back at home nothing but his family, why is he so determined to keep going and keep living, after 47 days on the ocean, in these POW camps where he is treated as less than an animal? Level 3- the universal theme of the book Unbroken is very unclear. Witch possess the question what really is the theme and point Hillenbrand was trying to get across with her book? …show more content…
She chooses her words very carefully and makes it so almost every description falls into play somewhere else in the book. One example of this is the quote “passengers gazing from the window saw only the ship’s shadow, following it along the clouds “’like a huge shark swimming alongside.”’ When the clouds parted the passengers glimpsed giant creatures, turning in the sea, that looked like monsters” (2 Hillenbrand). This particular quote is a great example because it talks about the sharks in the sea and sharks are something Louie would have to face. It is also important because it says the sharks looked like monsters, after being out in the middle of the sea for 47 days with your biggest enemy being sharks they would probably start to look like monsters. This is the way Hillenbrand foreshadows not as a direct cliffhanger but more as subtle hints left in her language about how things may look or …show more content…
Personally I think it is amazing how they were able to resist the temptation of eating fish for so long. On top of that they lived mainly on rain water. Even in there most desperate hour they never thought of cannibalism which is amazing because they were hungry and desperate. Question 4- Louie was especially close to his brother Pete, who devoted himself to him. If Pete hadn’t been there, what would have become of Louie? Does Pete deserve credit for shaping Louie into a man who could endure and survive his Odyssean ordeal? If Pete hadn’t been there or even just hadn’t taken an interest in Louie I don’t think he ever would have become the person of integrity and strength we saw when he first got stations to when he got home. Louie would have stayed the same thieving boy who only had regard for himself. Pete turned his life completely around not only did he keep Louie out of prison he also got him to the Olympics. Without Pete I don’t think Louie would have had the strength to survive the 47 days on sea let alone the POW camps. So yes I do think Pete should get some credit for Louie being who he
Louie suffered night terrors, alcoholism, and after marrying his wife Cynthia, the couple came close to divorce. Louie was a hurt man that only felt a strong burning hatred for the people that had caused him his pain. Things finally started to turn around for louie in 1949 though when he went to a Billy Graham sermon in Los Angeles after lots of encouragement to go from his wife. This sermon was the start of louie 's next chapter of forgiveness and healing. He decided to follow Christ and became a Christian and soon after that he was able to forgive his tormentors in Japan and his night terrors ceased from there out.
Louie’s success was achieved by many values. The first value that was key to his success was morality. His brother Pete played a huge part in teaching Louie about his morals. He was the major reason why Louie changed his bad habits when he was a child. Pete was the perfect son; an athlete and a straight A student.
“He past the deflated Lash, but it meant little to him. He was tired. The Finns were small and distant, much too far away to catch. He found himself thinking of Pete, and of something that he had said as they sat on their bed years earlier: A lifetime of glory is worth a moment of pain. Louie thought: Let go.”
He moved on from high school and set his eyes on the 1936 Berlin Olympics. Louie “lived and breathed the 1,500 meters and Berlin. ”(22) Louie couldn’t get into what he could do best which was the 1,500 meters because “he couldn’t force his body to improve quickly enough to catch his older rivals by summer. He was heartbroken.
Even though, everyone had heard of him, Louie was notorious for stealing (8-9). Because of his raucousness and heritage , Louie became a candidate for an increasingly popular procedure called eugenics. Page 12 explains that “eugenics was forced sterilization, a surgical procedure that rendered patients unable to have children.” The thought of being an ‘unfit’ member of society scarred Louie tremendously. After a failed runaway attempt “Louie went upstairs, dropped into bed, and whispered his surrender to Pete.
Unbroken centers around a soldier named Louie Zamperini. Louie is on the American side fighting for peace in the South Pacific against the Japanese during WW2. Louie was a lieutenant in the U.S Air Force ,and served as a crewmember on the Green Hornet(B-24) Louie functioned as a bombardier who took pride in his duty. He was a true patriot.
After Louie’s plane crashed in the middle of the ocean, he and two other survivors had to overcome a series of conflicts before they could make it to safety. Throughout Laura Hillenbrand's book, "Unbroken", Louie’s most important characteristic of resilience that contributed to his survival was his awareness. With his awareness of his surroundings and situation, Louie was able to overcome the conflicts he faced such as shark attacks, dehydration, and starvation. One of the first obstacles that Louie and his friends face while they were stranded in the ocean, was the possibility of a shark attack.
When World War II started, he stopped his running career to join the army. He was very courageous to leave his family, his friends, and his running behind to serve in the military. Louis has survived many war battles and was good at doing it, so they called him back on another tour, but this time a tragedy happened. Louie's plane crashed and never made it to war. He survived because he landed in the middle of the Pacific Ocean stranded with just a raft.
Peter enjoyed being admired, it made him feel like a hero like on page 17 “I got to thinking it was good to have both of them at the movie with the money I earned.” Pete had just payed for both his girlfriend’s and Sucker’s tickets, and he felt like a hero for it. Pete felt admired, and loved it. But, when Pete insulted and hurt Sucker, he was faced with a dilemma. He wanted to apologize, in facts
In detailing the events that led up to her change in perspective, she made note of the honeysuckle that covered the walls of the well-house, the warm sunshine that accompanied going outdoors, and the cool stream of water that she felt as she placed her hand under the spout. These details kept the reader with her in the moment as she felt something less simple, but still universal; the returning of a, “ misty consciousness as of something forgotten.” In using rich diction, she maintained a sense of intimacy with the reader which allowed her to call on personal details from her own life and theirs. Later in the passage, she described how, once the reality of language was opened to her, and she returned to the house, “every object which I touched seemed to quiver with life.” She had gone through a complete shift of perspective, one that, to her, was felt entirely through senses other than sight or sound.
Louis learned a lot and when he returned from war, his character changed dramatically. In the beginning of Hillenbrand’s book, she described Louie as a delinquent, Louie stole things from liquor to souvenirs. Hillenbrand wrote “ At five, he started smoking , picking up discarded cigarette butts while walking to kindergarten” (5). These actions Louie executed shows
This was important to his survival, because not only was he having something to eat, but emotionally he felt that he wasn’t playing the ‘rules of Japan’s game’. Lastly, to resist attempts of dehumanization, Louie never let any of the guards see his true depression. This is shown
The novel Unbroken is set in Torrance, California in the summer of 1929. Louis Zamperini is a twelve-year-old delinquent who is struggling to find his way as an Italian immigrant in a small town. The theme of redemption and forgiveness are shown throughout the book and in each area of Louie’s life. Every aspect of Louie’s life shows how he redeems himself and how the ultimate act of forgiveness is the most powerful resource for redemption.
The three-time United States Track and Field Olympic champion, Gail Devers once said, “Sometimes we fall, sometimes we stumble, but we can’t stay down. We can’t allow life to beat us down. Everything happens for a reason, and it builds character in us, and it tells us what we are about and how strong we really are when we didn’t think we could be that strong.” In the non-fiction book Unbroken, by Laura Hillenbrand, protagonist Louis Zamperini demonstrates his everlasting perseverance through his everyday actions. Like Devers believed, the resilient Zamperini refused to be defeated or demoralized and did everything in his power to keep his feet on the ground and his chin up.
In Unbroken, when Louie, Mac, and Phil are in the boat,“Louie was determined to keep himself and the others lucid” (Hillenbrand 114). Louie was playing mind games and doing trivia with Phil and Mac, so that they didn’t go insane while they were on the boat. He was attempting to help everyone, including himself because sanity was the only thing that kept them from completely falling apart and losing all hope of ever going home. To get out of their situation, they needed sanity and to remember how to survive. In both texts, there was a form of helping and taking care of another person and/or