A Seperate Piece The Idealist I would say that Finny (Phineas) was the biggest idealist in the story. His feelings and many things on many issues, made me think of him this way. The actions that Finny take in the novel make him seem as though he is the happiest person on the planet, like for instance when he says “There is no war”, this showed that he wasn’t really bothered by the war which during that time period I believe it meant happiness. Finny also never lost faith in his so called friend Gene even though I think he knew in the back of his mind that Gene was against him the whole time yet also admired him at the same point. Finny was spontaneous person like the first time they jumped off the tree, and when he broke the school swimming record. Even with all of this Finny couldn’t seem to take it upon himself to believe certain things like, Gene breaking his leg, or there not being a war.
Although after breaking his leg however Finny is faced with his own personal struggle the bitterness of being a cripple and attempting to live in a world where sports and enlistment in the army are no longer a possibility. I think the second time Finny broke his leg he came to be one with the reality that he was in fact ruined, and that most of it was caused by Gene, and Gene’s ill-will toward him, which caused him to be cripple in the first place. Yet Finny still thought to see his dreams out, only this time through Finny, he said things like Gene i’m going to start conditioning you for the olympics, and so forth and so on. Finny in all cases was the “Idealist” of the story, one of the close contenders was Leper though, yet Finny still was more idealistic. The Realist Gene (Narrator) is the most realistic in the novel, yet in a few ways he is also idealistic, but never the less still the realist of the story. His look on life is that there is a war but not a war on far away battle field a war on the homefront, with being competitive with Finny, trying to ruin Finny, and knowing that he was in the process of breaking someones hopes and dreams.
The Term Paper on Separate Peace Finny Gene War
A Separate Peace In his book A Separate Peace John Knowles communicates what war really is. He uses a number of complex characters in a very complicated plot in order to convey the harsh, sad, cruel, destructive forces of war. The Characters Gene and Finny are used as opposing forces in a struggle between that cold reality of war-that is World War II in this story-and a separate peace. A peace ...
Gene best shows his realistic view point when he causes Finny to break his leg the first time he feels the guilt with-in him and starts to feel sorrow for finny yet here is where his idealistic side came out as well he did feel sorrow for Finny but in the back of his head he was still thinking I have to ruin him. Even when Finny, Genes supposed best friend died Gene felt this way yet his mourning of Finny’s death came from with-in himself where as he thought of Finny’s death as his own meaning that Finny’s death hurt him so bad that it felt as though he had also parishes. Gene’s realistic views on death, war, school, and many other things make him a shoe-in for the “Realist” of the story, yet if it was only from Finny’s view-point maybe just maybe Finny could have been the realist of the story.