Indian Camp Essay, Research Paper
Ernest Hemingway’s “Indian Camp” is a story in which a man looks back upon a very influential event in his childhood. The story tells of a young boy named Nick, who watches as his father aids in the birth of a young Indian child. The circumstances that arrive during this event shape the “older Nick’s” perception of his father, as well as life and mortality.
Nick experiences his first eye-opening experience in the lines on page sixteen which describe the screams of the woman. As the father tells Nick that “All her muscles are trying to get the baby born. That is what is happening when she screams,” he is justifying the screams to Nick, and in the fathers comment that her screams are “not important” he is minimizing the importance that Nick should place on the pain of the Indian woman. Nick shows compassion in his question to his father about stopping the screaming, but does not question the idea that his father finds the screams so unimportant that he does not even hear them. This experience succeeds in relating two points to Nick. The first is a window to the level of his fathers callousness. The second is his perception of the well being of others.
The lessons learned in this short excerpt of the story capitalize another turning point of understan
These two events are very implicit of the changing of view of the younger Nick portrayed in the story and the older Nick who is telling the story. The older Nick shows that this event had a large impact in changing his views about life, and seemingly more importantly, his father. A birth of animosity becomes evident, as well as ideas about social status, and mortality.