Abstinence and indulgence in Captain Corelli’s Mandolin Characters to be seen: Carlo Captain Corelli Mandras Father Arsenios Pelagia Doctor Iannis.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The people Look for some people. Write it down. By the water
Advertisements

Foods For Thought.
The idea of morality as a social contract offers an explanation of why its reasonable to act in accordance with the dictates of morality As such it provides.
Word List A.
A.
Dolch Words.
A Collection of Precious Thoughts
Bullying at the schools. Bullying is a problem all over. Many children and teens have to deal with more than one school bully, and sometimes even friends.
UNTOLD DAMAGE Children’s accounts of living with harmful parental drinking Collaborative research SHAAP/ ChildLine in Scotland to explore what children.
Mercutio’s Character.
Krakus had three children - two sons and a daughter. His eldest son should have been a ruler upon his death, but was slain by his younger brother, who.
Lennie and his relationship with other characters By: Tristan, Alex and Max.
The Philosophy of Exotischism The Essence of the Soul 341 You may have heard it said that it is a good thing that we all feel shame from time to time.
Family ISN’T Always Family BELIEFS AND VALUES can change Beliefs and values are very important in someone’s life. Throughout life situations these beliefs.
The Philosophy of Exotischism An Overview 85 In the period following World War II there were many books and articles published that showed how.
Poverty A Personal response…. Poverty A Personal response… Psalm 82:3 Defend the weak and the fatherless; uphold the cause of the poor and the oppressed.
Aristotle and Rationalism By: Noorain, Sonya, Pooneh.
19 Sexual Health Centre 28 Richmond Street Saint John, N. B
Your Text Here Real Christians Dance Ecclesiastes 9:1-18.
Themes from The Old Man and the Sea.
ETHICS BOWL kantian ETHICS.
0.35sec.
Song Lyric Project Kate W.. Big Black Car By Gregory Alan Isakov This is one of my favorite songs for many reasons. Gregory’s slow and dreamy voice fits.
Child Development Section 2-2 “Teen Parenthood”
Analyzing Characters Charts

The Prodigal Son – Luke 15:11-32
Unscramble the names of the two families
The fault in our stars By John Green Publisher: The Penguin Group
 Holden is very lonely, and most of the novel shows him attempting to find company or dwelling on the fact that he is lonely- “practically the whole.
Osborne's relationships with his fellow officers:  He has a very strong relationship with Stanhope, Osborne is used to show Stanhope's reverse (softer)
When you’re unconsciously searching for something and you don’t know what When you stop maturing emotionally When you’re looking for love and scarred by.
Supporting Families with LGBT Children Calderdale & Kirklees Women ’ s Centre and Gay and Lesbian Youth in Calderdale: a joint project.
FACTS AND VALUES 1. Extrinsic value vs. Intrinsic value  If something has an intrinsic value, it has the value by itself.  It has the value not because.
The Judges Week of March Pages Orleanna, Sanderling Island  Orleanna’s guilt  Why didn’t she disobey Nathan's command and take the girls.
I am ready to test!________ I am ready to test!________
Sight Words.
Team Chapel “The Four Words Every Man Needs To Live By” 8/20/15.
A Godly Family In An Ungodly World No Place Like Home “So he got up and went to his father. "But while he was still a long way off, his father saw him.
Power Point Sight Words
August 2009 Word of Life Having loved his own who were in the world, he loved them to the end. (John 13:1) Do you know when the Gospel relates these words?
Description: Tybalt in the Film “Romeo And Juliet” is a character of class and class alone. Tybalt wears mainly black clothing likes suits and western.
Comprehension Analyze Text Goal for Lesson 26: You will: 1. Understand point of view 2. Know the author’s purpose.
Philosophy 4610 Philosophy of Mind Week 8: Can a Computer Think?
The Prodigal Son Year 5 Here I Am Lesson 4. The Prodigal Son Introduction Jesus told many stories to his friends to help them understand difficult things.
 Dystopian is opposite word of utopian. It describes the society which is developed negatively. The dystopian society has dictatorial government and.
Human Sexuality Final Project Utah vs. German beliefs Christina Randle Cathy Carey FHS 2450 July 19, 2012.
P. Ribeiro 1 Mere Christianity C.S. Lewis Right and Wrong As A Clue To The Meaning Of The Universe A Flow-Chart Approach.
‘Hemingway urges us to open ourselves up to the possibility and transformational power of love.’ Discuss with reference to Frederic Henry’s journey in.
Or Why the Doctrine of Sin is Good News 1 John 1:8-9.
Five Fav’s and Blocked By: Hailey Mandelko Period 6.
After today’s lesson I will be able to: Explain Kant’s theory on moral ethics Explain the term ‘categorical imperative’ Understand the phrase 'Duty and.
Sight Words.
By Jemma, Lauren, Rachel, Laura, Stuart and Wee Ross.
CHARACTER STUDY Macbeth. Macbeth Character What kind of person is Macbeth? In the beginning: He is brave and valiant. He appears to be loyal to Duncan.
High Frequency Words.
Free Fall By: Mindi Scott Genre: Fictional Teen Romance.
‘I am David’ Answers to booklet. Chapter 3 Chapter 3 1.At this point in the story, it is not clear as to why ‘the man’ in the camp helped David to escape.
Unhealthy Relationships Types of Abuse Date Rape What You Should Do.
Gospel Reading Luke 18:1-8.
Jennifer Johnston.  Alec is our narrator. He is telling us the story using flashback. Write down three words you might use to describe him.
Romeo and Juliet Final Project By: Allia Bekkers, Ally Rupiper, Gabi Echevarria.
High Frequency words Kindergarten review. red yellow.
Created By Sherri Desseau Click to begin TACOMA SCREENING INSTRUMENT FIRST GRADE.
Haley Venable Period 2. This section is explaining what exactly mental disorders are, how to recognize when someone has a mental disorder and how a mental.
Their eyes were watching god
Domestic Violence 11 Do this lesson with women police if possible
Bell Ringer Open your student workbook and turn to page 67.
Presentation transcript:

Abstinence and indulgence in Captain Corelli’s Mandolin Characters to be seen: Carlo Captain Corelli Mandras Father Arsenios Pelagia Doctor Iannis

Father Arsenios He was notorious for having been an adulterer and for having come from Epirus because he wanted to remarry. He was suspect of being interested in widows, an extremely unethical and blasphemous idea for the Greeks. His infamy also arose from the fact that he often consumed irreligiously large volumes of alcohol, particularly Robola wine. The priest was also extremely fat, and his movement was described as “waddling”. As a consequence, he was continually perspiring heavily. He was an unorthodox priest who abstained from normal religious practice, but the Greeks still sought him for comfort and guidance. His indulgence in food, drink and women stopped, however, with the arrival of the war, where he instantly became immensely indulgent in religion, God and philosophical and utopian ideas. By the end of his life, he was a thin man who had turned insane with his constant maniacal preaching at the Italians and Germans. Father Arsenios’ case is a strange one, because it shows a complete reversal in the things he indulged in and those which he abstained from. Greek church Cephallonian farm

Pelagia She is forced to abstain from sex with Corelli (she never appears to desire sex with Mandras) because if she were to have a child, it would be illegitimate. Marrying the captain was out of the question, for if he were to get killed, she would be an unwanted widow for the rest of her life and she would be called a whore, as the doctor curtly points out to her. Besides, the child would grow up fatherless. She also demonstrates an enormous capacity to love a person (although, quite often, she does not seem to show it). This is proven by her relationship with her father and her love for the captain (and previously Mandras). One could say she brims over with love, but it would be incorrect to say she indulges in it, for indulgence is excessive and usually damaging. Pelagia is certainly not a damaging person. What is sad is that she became damaged. Pelagia never indulges in anything, but she has a passion for several things, such as medicine and everything she feels very attached to, particularly her goat and her father. Cephallonian beach

Dr Iannis Dr Iannis can be seen as a man who does not go to extremes very often, he abstains from being too conspicuous, except when it comes to religion, according to Father Arsenios who accuses him of being a “notoriously godless man”. An example of this is his views on his politics, where he is a moderate venizelist. However, he enjoys criticising politics, especially when he goes to the kapheneion to stun people like Kokolios with “his devastating critique of Communist economics.” The doctor is a professional man who has a loving passion for medicine and Cephallonia, which he has transferred to Pelagia. He is not obsessed by medicine, though, because he leads a relatively varied life and rarely does anything in excess. As a rather romantic and wet sort of view, the doctor can be seen as a man who indulges in life and beauty. The doctor is evidently a generous man who is against the beating of women and the other types of immoral treatment inflicted upon them in most Greek households. However, he seems to abstain from any type of useful work except for his medical practice. All the housework and physically demanding labour is performed by Pelagia.

Carlo Although he was huge in strength and size, Carlo never harmed anyone (except in battle) and always appeared as a gentle, quiet, modest and saddened man. This was because he was a homosexual and had to keep his sexual desires to himself, because he would be expelled from the army, publicly humiliated and mentally devastated. Consequently, he had to abstain from many of the “fun” activities engaged in by “the boys of La Scala”, and, as a result, from the life he would have liked to live without having to feel uncomfortable about his sexual desires. Cephallonian beach Another beautiful beach In his farewell letter to the captain, Carlo sadly says: “I hope you are not disgusted, and I hope that you will be able to forgive me and remember me without contempt. I hope that you will remember all the times that we have embraced as comrades and brothers, and that you will not shudder with retrospective horror because they were the caresses of a degenerate... I trust that for this you will not despise me as some might think that I deserve.” Fiskardo Carlo never indulged in anything, nothing was ever excessive, if anything, there was not enough in his life. He was alien to the rest of his world, but only to himself: he could not let himself be free, he had to abstain from a more worthwhile life in order to fit in and not be ostracised. Although some people would have understood, like Corelli, he simply could not take the risk of publicising the fact that he was a homosexual. Background: sunset in Cephallonia

Captain Corelli Argostoli some centuries ago The captain is a very emotional and passionate man who appears as a very good-humoured, entertaining and respectable invader. Although he is initially made to feel like a flea by the doctor, the latter learns to ignore the fact that he is an invader and labels him “our charming yet uninvited guest.” Corelli’s life is his music, and everything else falls behind it. He also loves the army, women, football and observing the world around him, which is what makes him such a culturally rich man, even though he has not travelled round the world like the doctor. Pelagia notes this and desperately falls in love with him, but she does not realise this until the episode in which they go on a quest for snails. A small harbour, possibly Fiskardo or Argostoli It is difficult to say that Corelli abstains from anything, since his life is so varied and colourful. He is, however, forced to abstain from sex and marriage with Pelagia for practical reasons, but this does not prevent them from loving each other. I do not think the captain indulges in anything because he does not need to. Although music is his paramount passion, it is not an obsession, and hence not an indulgence. He does not do anything in excess, like most characters.

Mandras Mandras thought he was not doing anything useful with his life and that “Doctor Iannis doesn’t think [he’s] good enough.” While fishing, he thinks “I love Pelagia, but I know that I will never be a man until I’ve done something important, something I can live with, something to be esteemed... I’ll be worth a dowry then.” He was very excited and anxious to marry Pelagia, but he sensibly thought they would be better off marrying after the war. Consequently, Mandras (and Pelagia) had to hold themselves back in relation to their sexual desires. During the war he fought alongside Hector, who brainwashed him, turning him into a violent, ruthless and mindless Communist. Together with Hector he killed “collaborators” and raped women in order to satisfy his primitive necessities (he had been seeing Pelagia for about a year and they had not slept together. Besides, raping was routine procedure). So, while with ELAS he ceased his long abstinence. His animal behaviour became so violent that he was unable to control it. When he got back home he saw Pelagia and couldn’t resist his impulses. By that time he had indulged so long in murdering and raping that he tried to violate her just like the peasant women he had disgraced previously. It could be said that by the time he was idolising Hector he was abstaining from a true, moral and useful life. He became what he had sworn never to be. Bay with chapel in the background

Most characters do not indulge in anything, most human beings do not. Excesses are negative and to be avoided, hence a non-indulging person is usually decent and likeable. Many characters have vivid and varied lives without indulgences of any kind, but, sadly, they also have to abstain from certain things that would complete their existences. Having to do this eventually ruins the happiness and even the lives of certain characters such as Carlo and perhaps Pelagia and the captain. The limitations they have to keep to are the product of the war, which is one of the many ways the novel illustrates the horrors and the misery caused by the useless and counterproductive dreams of a few tyrants. Corelli bluntly and rather pathetically points out that the war was going so badly for the Italians because “the Duce got some big ideas.” More to the point is the explanation given in the pamphlet produced by Carlo and Dr. Iannis: “This Ludicrous Buffoon has rearmed Germany, Belgium, and Austria, leaving His own army to fight scandalously unjustifiable wars without weapons... This Moral and Intellectual Pygmy... Has said “The more enemies, the greater the honour,” and so we have created enemies out of thin air and gone out to fight them without boots on our feet, and in armoured cars whose barrels are made of wood...” Rafael Holt