.

Monday, January 9, 2017

Nice Work by David Lodge

Nice Work, the young written by the British author David Lodge, portrays the clash of cultures mingled with the main shells of the story, Robyn Penrose and Victor Wilcox. such(prenominal) clash can be clearly appreciated in antithetical aspects of their give outs: personality, work and hearty status. The aim of this essay is to contrast and analyze these aspects in Robyns and Vics realities.\nIn the prototypic place, Robyn Penrose and Vic Wilcox have very(prenominal) diametrical personalities as it is sh testify in the unhurt story. Robyn is a conservative cardinal four-year-old woman. She is a tall and slim person with a womanly shaped figure. However, she prefers wearing pitch-dark and loose clothes, so that cypher can see her trunk as an object of cozy attraction. Furthermore, Robyn is a self- confident, optimistic and decided woman who thinks she is good at what she is doing and she prefers having her career to raising her make family. As an illustration, she teaches literature passionately and she is hoping to get employed at university, as she is a terminable lecturer in English. However, she is non interested in earning some(prenominal) money. On the other hand, Vics personality is quite varied from Robyns. He is an ambitious and money-minded man. repayable to his capitalist doctrines, money is very important to him. Vic is a sterile businessman; he and his family live in a well-favoured house, he wears expensive clothes, and he has a huge say-so room with expensive piece of furniture in it. In addition, his character understands a very competitive manner. A key slip of this is when he ensures that a pledge man loses his job because he was watching TV kind of of doing his job. Vic is also a tight and sensible man, and he has his own opinion, which is shown, for instance, when he has a intervention with his wife, Marjorie, about their daughters future studies. All these examples show how Vic and Robyn are so different in personality and this ostensibly affects every aspect of their lives. ...

No comments:

Post a Comment