Intro To Life of Pi Lecture Part 2
Intro To Life of Pi Lecture Part 2
Intro To Life of Pi Lecture Part 2
• Narrative Perspective
• Pi
• Richard Parker
• The Will to Live
• Characters
o Piscine “Pi” Molitor Patel
o Richard Parker
o The Author
o Francis Adirubasamy
o The Two Mr. Kumars
o Mr. Okamoto and Mr. Chiba
Narrative Perspective
The issue of narration becomes even more important at the end of the
novel when the reader is introduced to a third narrative voice, the
transcript of Mr. Okamoto and Mr. Chiba’s interview with Pi in the
hospital.
The fact that we hear two we hear two distinctly different accounts of
Pi’s experiences—neither of them from Pi directly—emphasizes
Martel’s theme of the relative nature of truth.
Pi
Richard Parker
The tiger Richard Parker, got his name due to a clerical error when he
was shipped to the Pondicherry Zoo. Yann Martel chose this name as a
reference to a character in Edgar Allen Poe’s only complete novel, The
Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket (1838). The story tells of
four shipwrecked me who after several days at sea, nearly perish and
draw lots to decide which one of them should be killed and eaten. The
cabin boy, named Richard Parker draws the short straw.
Characters
The Two Mr. Kumars—The firs Mr. Kumar is Pi’s biology teacher, an
atheist and a rationalist. It is through him that Pi comes to respect
atheists as the brothers of people of faith. The second Mr. Kumar is the
Muslim baker who introduces Pi to Islam. He is the religious/faithful
balance to the atheist and rational Mr. Kumar. Both Mr. Kumars meet
at the zoo and find the zebra a remarkable creature.