27 pages • 54 minutes read
A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
How does Carole see herself at the start of the short story? What literary techniques does Hill use to represent her self-regard, and how does her perception change in the end?
What does Carole take with her on her trip to see her grandparents? What symbolic and metaphoric significance do these objects possess? How is Hill using these familiar items to develop Carole’s character?
Compare and contrast Henry’s and Betty’s characters. Although they are husband and wife, the characters are not mirror images of one another. What is the significance of their subtle differences? In what ways might the husband or wife be more threatening than the other, and why?
Describe the narrative point of view. How does it enact Carole’s internal experience? How is Hill using this technique to capture Carole’s innocence, youth, and burgeoning sense of self?
Carole is the same age throughout the entirety of the short story. However, Carole’s character changes from the time she boards the flight to the time the story ends. What incidents, conversations, and characters contribute to her internal change? How does Hill convey her subtle evolutions?
When Henry and Betty interrogate Carole about her race, how does Carole respond? What does her confusion indicate about her sense of self, as well as the larger Canadian and American society’s understanding of what constitutes identity in the 1970s?
In what ways do Henry and Betty compromise Carole’s safety? How do her body language and speech mannerisms capture her emotional response to the couple? How do the other passengers’ and the stewardess’s involvement affect Carole?
Plus, gain access to 9,150+ more expert-written Study Guides.
Including features: