This paper is taken from

Similar documents
Vladimir Propp s Fairy Tale Functions Narrative Structure

Wonderful Lies (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2007). 2 Iona Archibald Opie and Peter Opie, The Classic Fairy Tales (Oxford ; New York:

SUMMER READING ASSIGNMENT FOR HONORS ENGLISH 1

English Language Arts Summer Reading Grade 7: Summer Reading BOOK REVIEW Read one fiction book at your reading level or above.

Grade 7: Summer Reading BOOK REVIEW Read one fiction book.

Booktalk for Number the Stars. Lowry, L. (1989). Number the stars. New York, NY: Random House.

Prisoner B Journal Prompts and Discussion Questions. {AppleNotes} by Ruth Gruener and Alan Gratz

The Boy in the Striped Pajamas. Chapter Questions - Chapter 1 & 2

Escape these Hardships. Literary works like This Way for the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen, Matryona s Home,

Antigone by Sophocles

About The Film. Illustration by Ari Binus

personality, that is, the mental and moral qualities of a figure, as when we say what X s character is

Joint submission by BBC, ITV, Channel 4, Channel 5, S4C, Arqiva 1 and SDN to Culture Media and Sport Committee inquiry into Spectrum

Key Terms and Concepts for the Cultural Analysis of Films. Popular Culture and American Politics

CONTENT FOR LIFE EXPLORING THE POSSIBILITIES AND PITFALLS OF HUMAN EXISTENCE BY USING MIMETIC THEORY

The Use of Stories and Narratives in Social Sciences Research

AMERICA AND THE HOLOCAUST

LiFT-2 Literary Framework for European Teachers in Secondary Education

LiFT-2 Literary Framework for European Teachers in Secondary Education /

Trinity Christian School 11 th grade Summer Reading Summer 2015

The Invaders by Jack Ritchie

New book examines the role of censorship in World War II

Question 2: What is the term for the consumer of a text, either read or viewed? Answer: The audience

WHAT ARE THE DISTINCTIVE FEATURES OF SHORT STORIES?

THE CONCEPT OF HERO IN RICK RIORDAN'S "PERCY JACKSON AND THE OLYMPIANS: THE LIGHTNING THIEF"

The character who struggles or fights against the protagonist. The perspective from which the story was told in.

Running Header: NARRATIVE CRITICISM 1. Narrative Criticism: Achievement of Narrative Objectives in The Lion King. Jason Johnson.

Historical Thinking Understanding the Six Historical Thinking Concepts From:

INTERPLAY BETWEEN TIME AND OPPORTUNITY WHEN AN INDIVIDUAL SEEKS TO CREATE A MEANINGFUL LIFE.

Excel Test Zone. Get the Results You Want! SAMPLE TEST WRITING

Review. Discourse and identity. Bethan Benwell and Elisabeth Stokoe (2006) Reviewed by Cristina Ros i Solé. Sociolinguistic Studies

Discipleship Bible School Application

On the Pursuit of Happiness. Camus creates a uniquely absurdist view through much of his book, The Stranger

THOMAS-KILMANN CONFLICT MODE QUESTIONNAIRE

Inventory of the Albert Rosenthal Papers,

Springton Lake Middle School 1900 N. Providence Road Media, Pennsylvania Telephone

ELEMENTS OF FICTION. Theme Central meaning or dominant idea Not usually directly stated

The character who struggles or fights against the protagonist. The perspective from which the story was told in.

Autobiography and Performance (review)

Guadalcanal Case Study Packet

Candidate A Commentary Get Out

Elements of a Short Story

WHAT DEFINES A HERO? The study of archetypal heroes in literature.

A TEACHER S GUIDE TO

BRUNDIBÁR. By Hans Krása Libretto by Adolph Hoffmeister

Cardinal Newman Catholic High School English Department: Year 7 Programme of Study 2015/2016

What we know about music and the brain

Confronting the Absurd in Notes from Underground. Camus The Myth of Sisyphus discusses the possibility of living in a world full of

C/ Fernando Poo 5 Madrid (Metro Delicias o Embajadores).

============================================================================= ===

Introduction to Drama

Collection management policy

Romeo and Juliet. a Play and Film Study Guide. Teacher s Book

Elements of Short Stories ACCORDING TO MS. HAYES AND HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON

PROGRAMME SPECIFICATION FOR M.ST. IN FILM AESTHETICS. 1. Awarding institution/body University of Oxford. 2. Teaching institution University of Oxford

ENGLISH 8 Pre- Requisite Assignment

UNIT 5. PIECE OF THE ACTION 1, ByJoseph T. Rodolico Joseph T. Rodolico

COMMUNICATION STYLES, TYPES AND CONFLICT RESOLUTION

Critical Strategies for Reading. Notes and Finer Points

The Postmodern as a Presence

Plot is the action or sequence of events in a literary work. It is a series of related events that build upon one another.

Q1. Name the texts that you studied for media texts and society s values this year.

Applying Method Sources Identifying Typical Moves in Applying Sources

Where there s hope, there s life. It fills us with fresh courage and makes us strong again.

Review of television production sector. Project terms of reference

Overview of the Unit:

DRAMA LESSONS BASED ON CLIL Created by Lykogiannaki Styliani

Narrative Reading Learning Progression

Web:

Christian Storytelling 1

Ways to Enhance Positive Thought Patterns Adapted from: Change Your Brain, Change your Life by Daniel G. Amen, MD Written by: Alwlynn Lamp, M.Ed.

Logic and argumentation techniques. Dialogue types, rules

am describing, however, is one of the most successful television shows ever created: Game of

[PDF] How To Be Miserable: 40 Strategies You Already Use

Family Plays. Excerpt Terms & Conditions. This excerpt is available to assist you in the play selection process.

Deliberate taking: the author, agency and suicide

Meaning of Folklore. Alan Dundes, Simon J. Bronner. Published by Utah State University Press. For additional information about this book

Sound Connections Case study. Bexley North Borough Orchestra London Symphony Orchestra

THE BCCSA S CODE OF CONDUCT FOR SUBSCRIPTION BROADCASTING SERVICE LICENSEES

Reference: Chapter 6 of Thomas Caldwell s Film Analysis Handbook.

Intake Forms: NICoE Intrepid Spirit One. Not interested

Annotating Musical Theatre Plots on Narrative Structure and Emotional Content

Answer the following questions: 1) What reasons can you think of as to why Macbeth is first introduced to us through the witches?

Torture Journal: Journal on Rehabilitation of Torture Victims and Prevention of torture

Short Stories Unit. Exposition: The beginning of the story where the characters, setting and/or situation are revealed (background knowledge).

A Most Extraordinary Technique

BBC Television Services Review

S-DASH (2009) Risk Identification Checklist For Use in Stalking and Harassment Cases

Annotating Musical Theatre Plots on Narrative Structure and Emotional Content

LITERAL UNDERSTANDING Skill 1 Recalling Information

Thursday, November 1, 12. Tartuffe

Year 5 Optional English SAT 2003 Reading Test Mark Scheme

Elements of Short Stories. Miss Giesler s LA Class

A Sherlock Holmes story The Norwood Builder by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Chapter 1

Humanities Learning Outcomes

Puss in Boots. Ideas Packet. Prepared for the Blackfriars of Agnes Scott College Production of Puss in Boots Adapted by Madge Miller

The Things They Carried. Vocabulary. Directions: Write the definition of each word. 1. Volition. 2. Imperative. 3. Cryptic. 4. Monotonous. 5.

O What is That Sound W.H.Auden

Frozen Shakespeare Troupe: Act 3-4

The world from a different angle

Transcription:

This paper is taken from Innovative Practice and Research Trends in Identity, Citizenship and Education Selected papers from the sixteenth Conference of the Children s Identity and Citizenship in Europe Academic Network London: CiCe 2014 edited by Peter Cunningham and Nathan Fretwell, published in London by CiCe, ISBN 978-1-907675-21-8 Without explicit authorisation from CiCe (the copyright holder) only a single copy may be made by any individual or institution for the purposes of private study only multiple copies may be made only by members of the CiCe Thematic Network Project or CiCe Association, or a official of the European Commission a member of the European parliament If this paper is quoted or referred to it must always be acknowledged as: Baloğlu, U. (2014) The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas : Otherness through a child s eyes, in P. Cunningham & N. Fretwell (eds.) Innovative Practice and Research Trends in Identity, Citizenship and Education. London: CiCe, pp. 211 215. CiCe 2014 CiCe Institute for Policy Studies in Education London Metropolitan University 166 220 Holloway Road London N7 8DB UK This paper does not necessarily represent the views of the CiCe Network. This project has been funded with support from the European Commission. This publication reflects the views only of the authors, and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use which may be made of the information contained therein. Acknowledgements: This is taken from the book that is a selection of papers given at the annual CiCe Conference indicated. The CiCe Steering Group and the editor would like to thank All those who contributed to the Conference The CiCe administrative team at London Metropolitan University London Metropolitan University, for financial and other support for the programme, conference and publication The Lifelong Learning Programme and the personnel of the Education and Culture DG of the European Commission for their support and encouragement.

The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas : Otherness through a child s eyes Uğur Baloğlu Istanbul University (Turkey) Abstract The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas is a fictional tale of the unlikeliest of friends: the son of a Nazi commandant and a Jewish boy held captive in a concentration camp. Written by John Boyne and published in 2006, the book was made into a film in 2008. The main characters in the film are children. Whilst there are many films on the Holocaust, this film is distinctive insofar as it is narrated from a child s perspective and the human tragedy involved is seen through a child s eyes. Keywords: Holocaust, children, otherness Introduction This study aims to illuminate the concepts of I and other through the content analysis of a cinema film. In some scenes, the content analysis is also accompanied by a discourse analysis. Throughout the analysis, notions of otherness, civic society, and the opposition between childhood and adulthood are questioned. The film analysed here is important because it concentrates both on general life and on controversies and crisis situations. In the study, the concept of the other is questioned from a child s perspective in a time of war. Set in Nazi Germany, the film begins when eight year old Bruno and his family have to move from their lovely home in Berlin to a new house in an unfamiliar place. For Bruno, it becomes unbearable for him not have any friends in this new place. So, one day, Bruno ventures into the unknown to explore his new environment by escaping from a small window in the outbuilding. Bruno faces a fence that he follows until he sees a child, Shmuel, sitting on the other side of the fence. Despite the fact that the two boys are separated physically by barbed-wire fence, their friendship grows and their lives become inescapably intertwined. Bruno brings him food and plays football with him. While they talk with each other regarding their lives, Shmuel tells Bruno that he is unable to find his father and that he is worried. One baleful day, Bruno takes off his clothes, replaces them with pyjamas to look like the others and sneaks onto the other side of the fence. While the boys are looking for Shmuel s father, they are herded into the gas chambers alongside the other prisoners. Other and Otherness The other is an ideological concept relevant to issues in epistemology, cultural identity problems, and psychoanalysis. As Bauman argues identities are set up as dichotomies: Woman is the other of man, animal is the other of human, stranger is the other of native,

212 abnormality the other of norm, deviation the other of law abiding, illness the other of health, insanity the other of reason, lay public the other of the expert, foreigner the other of state subject, enemy the other of friend (Bauman, 1991). From past to present, all wars, conquests, fights have been directed towards the other; often in an attempt to force others to accept their beliefs. War affects children in all the same ways that it affects adults, but also in different ways. First, children are dependent on the care, empathy, and attention of adults who love them. Second, events in childhood may adversely affect the life trajectory of children far more than adults (Barbara, 2006). From past to present as a result of conflict, millions of civilians have been killed or injured. More than half of these victims were children. The Second World War was a watershed event in which civilian victims were as numerous as combatants. Now, in almost all current conflicts, civilians are the majority of casualties, with children suffering disproportionately (Danziger, 2003). Social identities reflect the way that individuals and groups internalise established social categories within their societies, such as their cultural identities, gender identities, class identities, and so on. These social categories shape our ideas about who we think we are, how we want to be seen by others, and the groups to which we belong. Ideas of similarity and difference are central to the way in which we achieve a sense of identity and social belonging (Zevallos, 2011). Methodology and Analysis The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas is the film adaptation of a fictional tale about the Holocaust in Nazi Germany. It is necessary to analyse Germany s Nazi years in order to be able to connect with historical reality. It can be analysed via several methods such as narrative or technical analysis. In this paper I utilise Vladimir Propp s method of narrative analysis which divides a given tale into a series of sequences; beginning with an initial situation and continuing with the following thirty one functions: Absenting: A member of a family leaves the security of the home environment. This may be the hero or some other member of the family that the hero will later need to rescue. This division of the cohesive family injects initial tension into the storyline. The hero may also be introduced here, often being shown as an ordinary person. Interdiction: An interdiction is addressed to the hero. The hero is warned against some action. Violation of interdiction: The interdiction is violated. This generally proves to be a bad move and the villain enters the story, although not necessarily confronting the hero. Perhaps they are just a lurking presence or perhaps they attack the family whilst the hero is away. Reconnaissance: The villain makes an attempt at reconnaissance. The villain makes an active attempt at seeking information, for example searching for

213 something valuable or trying to actively capture someone. They may speak with a member of the family who innocently divulges information. They may also seek to meet the hero, perhaps knowing already the hero is special in some way. Delivery: The villain gains information about the victim. The villain's seeking now pays off and he or she now acquires some form of information, often about the hero or victim. Other information can be gained, for example about a map or treasure location. Trickery: The villain attempts to deceive the victim to take possession of victim or victim s belongings. The villain now presses further, often using the information gained in seeking to deceive the hero or victim in some way, perhaps appearing in disguise. This may include capture of the victim, getting the hero to give the villain something or persuading them that the villain is actually a friend and thereby gaining collaboration. Complicity: Victim taken in by deception, unwittingly helping the enemy. The trickery of the villain now works and the hero or victim naively acts in a way that helps the villain. This may range from providing the villain with something (perhaps a map or magical weapon) to actively working against good Villainy: Villain causes harm/injury to family member. There are two options for this function, either or both of which may appear in the story. In the first option, the villain causes some kind of harm, for example carrying away a victim or the desired magical object. In the second option, a sense of lack is identified, for example in the hero's family or within a community, whereby something is identified as lost or something becomes desirable for some reason, for example a magical object that will save people in some way. Mediation: Misfortune or lack is made known. The hero now discovers the act of villainy or lack, perhaps finding their family or community devastated or caught up in a state of anguish and woe. Beginning counter action: Seeker agrees to, or decides upon counter-action. The hero now decides to act in a way that will resolve the lack, for example finding a needed magical item, rescuing those who are captured or otherwise defeating the villain. This is a defining moment for the hero as this is the decision that sets the course of future actions and by which a previously ordinary person takes on the mantle of heroism. Departure: Hero leaves home; First function of the donor: Hero is tested, interrogated, attacked etc., preparing the way for his/her receiving magical agent or helper (donor); Hero s reaction: Hero reacts to actions of future donor; Receipt of magical agent: Hero acquires use of a magical agent;

214 Guidance: Hero is transferred, delivered or led to whereabouts of an object of the search; Struggle: Hero and villain join in direct combat; Branding: Hero is branded; Victory: Villain is defeated; Liquidation: Initial misfortune or lack is resolved (object of search distributed, spell broken, slain person revived, captive freed); Return: Hero returns; Pursuit: Hero is pursued; Rescue: Hero is rescued from pursuit; Unrecognised arrival: Hero unrecognised, arrives home or in another country; Unfounded claims: False hero presents unfounded claims; Difficult task: Difficult task proposed to the hero; Solution: Task is resolved; Recognition: Hero is recognised; Exposure: False hero or villain is exposed; Tranfiguration: Hero is given a new appearance; Punishment: Villain is punished; Wedding: Hero marries and ascends the throne (Propp, 1968) Analysis In the first scene of the film, Nazi flags are seen hanging on the front of a building. This figures as an important indicator of the setting of the film, situating its time and place as the period of the Second World War. After moving from Berlin to Auschwitz, Bruno doesn t feel as happy as he had previously. He has no friends and no area in which to play. During the first few days, whilst Bruno is feeling unhappy, he begins to explore the area in which he now lives. One day, Bruno comes upon a fence and sees a young boy sitting on the other side.

215 This coeval boy is wearing striped pyjamas and a cloth cap. The boys begin to get to know each other. Bruno continues to explore the woods near his house and often finds himself at the fence spending time with Shmuel and bringing him food. They play games with one another and quickly become friends. Play is simultaneously a source of relaxation and stimulation for the brain and the body. Toys are not only fun, but also tools that help children learn about themselves and the world around them. Some of the reasons children play is to learn, to create, to focus and to get rid of problems. Some of the outcomes of children s play include the following: language skills, thinking skills, small muscle skills, large muscle skills, creative skills and social skills. One fateful day, Bruno changes his clothes to become other and pass to the other side of the fence in order to fulfil his promise of helping Shmuel find his father. As the boys search for Shmuel s father, the soldiers herd the prisoners, Bruno amongst them, into the gas chambers where they meet their untimely death hand in hand. References Barbara, J. S. (2006) Impact of War on Children and Imperative to End War. Croat Med J, 47(6). Bauman, Z. (1991) Modernity and Ambivalence. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. Danziger, N. (2003) Children and War. The Magazine of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement. Propp, V. (1968) Morphology of the Folk Tale. Zevallos, Z. (2011) What is Otherness? The Other Sociologist.