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Saturday, March 23, 2019

The Fantasy World of The Fixer :: Bernard Malamud The Fixer

The Fantasy World of The Fixer  In Bernard Malamuds The Fixer, virtu altogethery all of Yakov Boks cadence is spent in prison. The Fixer is an examination of granting immunity and its compliment, commitment (Helter serviceman 67 ). Though Bok has no physical freedom, the longer that he is imprisoned, the more true freedom he obtains. Bok is able to attain this freedom through and through his dreams and hallucinations. These sequences are important because they prevent the story from becoming static, exclusively more important, they illustrate that true freedom lies within ones self. Yakov Bok is tortured in the governments attempt to obtain his confession to the ritual murder of Zhenia Golov. He is poisoned, elusion searched, chained, and nigh frozen to death The fixer was chained to the wall all day,and at night he lay on the bedplank, his forks locked in the stocks...the leg holes were tight and chafed his flesh if he tried to turn a little...the straw mattress had been removed from his cell...now in chains, he thought the searches of his body business leader end and they increased to six a day, three in the morning and three in the afternoon.( 236 ) These tortures leave Bok with no conscious vigor to focus against his captors. Thus, it is only through Boks dreams and hallucinations that he crowd out escape and turn over with his imprisonment. One of the most important freedoms which Bok finds within himself is the freedom to accept his religion. In one of his dreams he dreams that his father-in-law, the only father that he has really known, has died. When he wakes, Bok says to himself, Live Shmuel, live...let me die for you (287 ). Bok experiences a kind of panic after awakening from this dream. He cannot fathom that he will not see this man again, even though he knows that their ever meeting again is nearly impossible. Bok realizes through this dream his true feelings towards the old man whom he called father. Furthermore, Bok knows that th rough his death for a crime he did not commit, he can save many of his Jewish brothers from death in the riots which would ensue if he were released. Therefore, Boks saying let me die for you is directed not just to his father-in-law, but to all those who, had they been in the wrong place at the wrong time as he was, could just as easily have been charge of this same crime.

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