In Fenstad’s Mother, by Charles Baxter, character is a very essential element to the story. The main character, Harry Fenstad, is a complicated person, but it is his mother, Mrs. Clara Fenstad, who I feel is a more important and complex person. In this brief paper, I will explain why it is my opinion that both of these characters play a crucial role in the story by complementing and developing each other’s character.	 	 Fenstad career is a brochure writer, but he also teaches an extension English-composition class at the downtown campus of the state university. He attends church regularly, and his passion is ice skating. I know that these may seem like simple ways to describe a character I have referred to as complicated, but there is so much more that lies beneath these plain descriptions. 	 Fenstad says that he likes to teach because "he liked teaching strangers and because he enjoyed the sense of hope that classrooms held for him" (page 117).
Harry seems to be a very distant person in that he likes to be around people who do not really know him.
He would much rather be an observer than a very active participant. When he goes ice skating in the beginning of the story, there are a lot of people who are skating, but he can blend right in. He hs a few friends, but they are very similar to Fenstad. They like the same things and have the same attitudes about life. Fenstad does not want to seem to deviate from his own normal way of life. 	 Fenstad’s mother, Clara, is a character quite opposite from her son. She is older and does not get out of her house much.
The Dissertation on Appearance: Always Not a True Factor to Judge Character of a Person
William Shakespeare has become a very critical landmark in English literature. He provides our society with a range of moral and valuable lessons that put him ahead of his time through his work. His play, The Merchant of Venice, provides the readers with a very significant lesson. Through the casket plot, the different portrayals of certain groups, and the portrayals of people, he is able to prove ...
She used to be very active in politics and loves to be around people. She has a kindness and generosity that instantly attracts other people. When she begins to visit Fenstad’s logic class, the students seem to be more interested in what she has to say than in what Fenstad is trying to teach. Mrs. Fenstad is aware and understands her own magnetism and tries not to take too much attention away from her son. 	 The two characters help each other develop throughout the story.
Fenstad is a person who is very reluctant to change, whereas his mother is an individual whose mind is always open to new possibilities. It did not surprise me that Mrs. Fenstad and York Follette, a student in Fenstad’s class, instantly become friends. Follette is a different person: he is African American, he thinks on a different political plane, he listens to music that Mrs. Fenstad is not all to familiar with. Mrs. Fenstad says that she wants to meet Follette after hearing about him from Fenstad.
In my imagination (because there is only one scene when Mrs. Fenstad and Follette have any actual dialogue), Follette probably thought he could learn as much from Mrs. Fenstad as she could learn from him. 	 One of the scenes where it is evident how unlike the two main characters are is when they are at Country Bob’s, a restaurant. A homeless woman comes up to the two and asks if they can spare any change. Mrs. Fenstad instantly feels compassion for the woman and offers her the coat that she is wearing.
Fenstad is almost appalled by the audacity of the homeless woman and by his mother’s action. He begs his mother not to give her coat to the woman. It is obvious that he is very uncomfortable and disturbed by the situation. He sees his mother’s generosity and realizes that that is something he innately lacks. He shoves two twenty dollar bills into the homeless woman’s hand as he pleads with her to leave. Fenstad seems to feel disgusted by this woman rather than sorry for her.
The Essay on Analysis Of Mrs.Mallard's Character In "The Story Of An Hour" By Kate Chopin.
Socrates, a Greek philosopher once said: “Each one must know himself.” Unfortunately, most of us are not aware of our true character. Social conventions are the main cause making us repress what we really think and feel. Only when unexpected events happen, we do have an opportunity to take a close look at our hidden “self.””The Story of An Hour” by Kate Chopin ...
His mother, on the other hand, sees a person in need, and she wants to do what she can to help. She sacrifices her own comfort and warmth to give those same feelings to another human being. Fenstad is not selfish, but more like most of the people of the world; he thinks of himself before he thinks of the well-being of others. 	 Even though the two characters are very different, they also have many similarities. They both care for and worry about the other. Fenstad is worried about is mother’s mental capacity: "Quickly he checked her apartment for any signs of memory loss or depression" (page 117).
Mrs. Fenstad is also worried about her son’s mental well-being; "How’s your soul, Harry?" (page 117).
Each has a genuine concern for how the other is handling life. Mrs. Fenstad makes comments about Harry’s divorce from his ex-wife, Eleanor and about the new woman he is dating, Susan. Mrs. Fenstad seems to feel as if her son is not really happy with his love life; he does not spend enough time thinking about himself. Fenstad thinks that his mother spends too much time thinking about other people and not thinking about herself as much as she should. They try to help each other realize the downfalls in their lives. 	 An important element of the story is that the author rarely refers to the characters using their first names.
Mrs. Fenstad calls her son "Harry" and Fenstad introduces his mother as "Clara," but when Baxter is telling the story he usually refers to the characters as "Fenstad and his mother". I think this is significant because the reader is able to see more of themselves in the characters. Almost everyone has a little "Fenstad" in them as they also have elements of "Fenstad’s mother" in their characters. 	 As I stated in my thesis, the two characters complement and develop each other. They are mother and son, so naturally they have some qualities that are alike.
The character traits that are different are still similar. Each one is set in their own ways. Mrs. Fenstad believes in sacrificing the self for the good of humanity, Fenstad is more personally goal-oriented. They work well together, though. They make each other think about the different possibilities that life holds.
The Homework on Turn To Our Mother One Society Life
A mother is like a flower that grows before the eyes of her kids. I never knew how much my mother meant to me until I became an adult. In today's society the younger generation fail to understand the importance of having their mother in their lives. It seems like they forgot who carried them for nine months, clothed, and fed them. Most children thought that they were wiser than their mother. In ...
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