One of Ours

How does the author use imagery in the novel, One of Ours?

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Consistently throughout her novel, Cather includes lengthy descriptions of the natural world, its beauty, and its destruction. During Books 1 and 2, when Claude is in Frankfort, Cather describes the American landscape and the different farms around the town. For example, Cather describes Mr. Royce’s mill as a place of “sharp-contrasts; bright sun and deep shade, roaring sound and heavy, dripping silence” (56). Not only does this description create a vivid testament to the American landscape, but also it functions symbolically in Cather’s novel. Just as the mill is a place of irreconcilable contrasts, so too will Claude’s relationship with Enid be a place of irreconcilable contrasts, uncomfortably synthesized by the marriage itself. In this way, Cather’s use of poetic description is two-fold: it both bears witness to the American landscape before World War I and adds a layer of symbolism to her novel’s plot.

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