The Pearl: Difference between revisions
Content added Content deleted
Haggishunter (talk | contribs) (Move "tear jerker" here from YMMV.) |
Looney Toons (talk | contribs) (Moved Tear Jerker to new Tear Jerker subpage) |
||
Line 37: | Line 37: | ||
* [[Meaningful Name]]: Coyotito is, if it wasn't clear enough, named after a coyote. Which leads to him {{spoiler|being shot in the head when his cries are mistaken for that of a coyote's}} |
* [[Meaningful Name]]: Coyotito is, if it wasn't clear enough, named after a coyote. Which leads to him {{spoiler|being shot in the head when his cries are mistaken for that of a coyote's}} |
||
* [[Roaring Rampage of Revenge]]: Kino goes on one in the penultimate chapter. |
* [[Roaring Rampage of Revenge]]: Kino goes on one in the penultimate chapter. |
||
* [[Tear Jerker]]: Regardless how you feel about the story, there's no denying that {{spoiler|[[Kill the Cutie|Coyotito's]] death is [[Downer Ending|incredibly]] sad.}} |
|||
* [[We Could Have Avoided All This]]: After Kino refuses the pearl dealer's offer of 1000 and then 1500 pesos for the pearl (because he believes it's worth at least fifty times that much and that the dealer's trying to cheat him), some of his neighbors express the view that he should have accepted the 1500, since that's wealth enough to a poor man who's never had any money. {{spoiler|Considering what happens in the last third of the novel, they may have been right.}} |
* [[We Could Have Avoided All This]]: After Kino refuses the pearl dealer's offer of 1000 and then 1500 pesos for the pearl (because he believes it's worth at least fifty times that much and that the dealer's trying to cheat him), some of his neighbors express the view that he should have accepted the 1500, since that's wealth enough to a poor man who's never had any money. {{spoiler|Considering what happens in the last third of the novel, they may have been right.}} |
||
Revision as of 15:41, 15 June 2023
Written by: | John Steinbeck |
---|---|
Central Theme: | |
Synopsis: | |
First published: | 1947 |
A 1947 novella by John Steinbeck.
The Pearl is the story of Kino, a poor diver. Kino's son, Coyotito, is stung by a scorpion. In order to pay the doctor to cure him, Kino goes diving for pearls. (It's his job anyway, but it's got extra urgency now.) He eventually finds the Pearl of the World, but it brings him nothing but trouble.
The story was filmed in 1947.
Tropes used in The Pearl include:
- Ambition Is Evil
- Artifact of Attraction: The pearl
- Artifact of Doom: Sort of, because Humans Are the Real Monsters.
- Does Not Wear Shoes: Juana, probably due to Barefoot Poverty.
- Downer Ending: Coyotito is killed. Kino and Juana throw away the pearl.
- Fantastic Racism
- Gold Fever: More like pearl fever.
- Greed: A major theme in the book. Leading to...
- Humans Are the Real Monsters
- It Got Worse: Oh, so very much.
- It's All Junk
- Jerkass: The doctor who treats Coyotito comes to mind...
- Littlest Cancer Patient (okay, it's not cancer exactly, but...)
- Leitmotif: A literary example in Kino and Juana's Song of Family and The Pearl's Song of Evil
- MacGuffin: The pearl, of course.
- Meaningful Name: Coyotito is, if it wasn't clear enough, named after a coyote. Which leads to him being shot in the head when his cries are mistaken for that of a coyote's
- Roaring Rampage of Revenge: Kino goes on one in the penultimate chapter.
- We Could Have Avoided All This: After Kino refuses the pearl dealer's offer of 1000 and then 1500 pesos for the pearl (because he believes it's worth at least fifty times that much and that the dealer's trying to cheat him), some of his neighbors express the view that he should have accepted the 1500, since that's wealth enough to a poor man who's never had any money. Considering what happens in the last third of the novel, they may have been right.