Doe Season By David Michael Essay, Research Paper
The short story written by David Michael Kaplan, ?Doe Season? is what I have
chosen to analyze. ?Doe Season? is about a young, innocent girl, named
?Andy? who goes hunting with her father, his friend ?Charlie Spreun? and
his 11 year-old son ?Mac.? At the beginning of the story she is praying that
they will get a deer. Throughout the story, the narrator tells of Andy?s past
experienes, like when she saw the ocean for the first time and was frightened.
The narrator also mentions actual experiences she has within the hunting trip,
like when Mac asks her if she has ever seen ?it? (a penis). She is also
disgusted when the young boy tells her that they sometimes cut the the deer?s
?it? off when a process called ?hogdressing? is being done (not
realizing how cruel hunting can be). Once the opportunity comes for her to shoot
a deer, she wishes it would run away and wonders why it does not. She shoots it,
but it runs away. She can?t believe what she did, and is unable to fall
asleep. That night, she has a bazaar experience of the deer coming right up to
her tent and allowing her to pet it. She sees the gaping wound, and reaches down
and feels the warm heart beating (realizing she was destroying a life). The next
morning they find it dead. She feels terrible and starts running away. The theme
of the story is the idea that in order to mature, a child must reconcile life
with the reality of death. The theme of the story is found directly within the
title. I know from my own experience about a real doe season. It is necessary
that their be a time for only killing the females since the population is much
greater than that of bucks. Therefore, it controls the ratio between female and
male deer not to be so different. This implies that at the same time the female
innocence must unavoidably be destroyed, just as the doe must be. It takes place
only after the yo
?Hunting.? There are three symbols in this story that have a great deal to
do with the central theme. Of course, the doe would represent the innocence
being destroyed. The ocean is supposed to be adulthood, when it is mentioned
that ?That was the first time she?d seen the ocean, and it frightened her.
It was huge and empty, yet always moving. Everything lay hidden? (345-346). As
well as the last context stating, ?…all around her roared the mocking of the
terrible, now inevitable, sea? (354). Her mother?s accidental exposal of her
breasts is a symbol of Andy?s seeing that she will, one day, be like that. Her
mother is the only way of seeing what womanhood is like. Finally, the changes
made in the main character, Andy, have a lot to do with the the central theme.
She first prays, ? Please let us get a deer? (348). After she shoots the
deer, she thought, ?What have I done? (352)? At the end, when she watches
her father cut the deer open, Andy started running away from them. ?Charlie
Spoon and Mac and her father–crying ?Andy, Andy? (but that wasn?t her
name, she would no longer be called that)? (354). Each experience enabled her
to lose a little bit of innocence each time. Actually, for a child to advance
and grow in life, it takes the loss of innocence. So that is what the change in
the character was; her loss of innocence. It is clearly shown throughout each
and every one of the elements that in order to fully become an adult, a child
must come to terms that living comes along with the difficult reality of dieing.
In the sense that the child?s loss of innocence cannot be avoided, just as the
doe?s loss of life cannot be. This is just a part of life, a part of growing,
a part of becoming an adult. Everyone goes through it. Everyone has their own
personal experience of the loss. This little girl?s was conveyed in the
scenario of death.