The relationship between Santiago and the sea in "The Old Man and the Sea" is complex and multilayered. On a basic level, the sea provides Santiago's livelihood as a fisherman, but also subjects him to periods of bad luck where no fish are caught. More symbolically, the sea represents both gifts and obstacles in life, illustrated through Santiago's struggle to bring home the great marlin he catches. The changing roles of the sea as nurturer and destroyer reflect the dual nature of nature and the world. Hemingway depicts the sea in a way that suggests both masculine and feminine attributes, and Santiago's intimate understanding of the sea contrasts with less respectful younger fishermen.
The relationship between Santiago and the sea in "The Old Man and the Sea" is complex and multilayered. On a basic level, the sea provides Santiago's livelihood as a fisherman, but also subjects him to periods of bad luck where no fish are caught. More symbolically, the sea represents both gifts and obstacles in life, illustrated through Santiago's struggle to bring home the great marlin he catches. The changing roles of the sea as nurturer and destroyer reflect the dual nature of nature and the world. Hemingway depicts the sea in a way that suggests both masculine and feminine attributes, and Santiago's intimate understanding of the sea contrasts with less respectful younger fishermen.
The relationship between Santiago and the sea in "The Old Man and the Sea" is complex and multilayered. On a basic level, the sea provides Santiago's livelihood as a fisherman, but also subjects him to periods of bad luck where no fish are caught. More symbolically, the sea represents both gifts and obstacles in life, illustrated through Santiago's struggle to bring home the great marlin he catches. The changing roles of the sea as nurturer and destroyer reflect the dual nature of nature and the world. Hemingway depicts the sea in a way that suggests both masculine and feminine attributes, and Santiago's intimate understanding of the sea contrasts with less respectful younger fishermen.
The relationship between Santiago and the sea in "The Old Man and the Sea" is complex and multilayered. On a basic level, the sea provides Santiago's livelihood as a fisherman, but also subjects him to periods of bad luck where no fish are caught. More symbolically, the sea represents both gifts and obstacles in life, illustrated through Santiago's struggle to bring home the great marlin he catches. The changing roles of the sea as nurturer and destroyer reflect the dual nature of nature and the world. Hemingway depicts the sea in a way that suggests both masculine and feminine attributes, and Santiago's intimate understanding of the sea contrasts with less respectful younger fishermen.
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Old Man and the Sea” was presumably a part of
Hemingway’s “Sea Book trilogy”. The presence of
the sea in the novel is so pervasive that it assumes the place of a sort of second protagonist in the novel. The relationship between the old man and the sea not only facilitates the understanding of Sea’s significance but also reveals much about the main protagonist, Santiago.
On the very basic level, the old man being a
fisherman, the relationship between the Sea and himself was that which a worker has with his workplace. The sea furnished him his daily wages in form of fishes. The identity of the old man as a fisherman completely depended upon the Sea. He was considered one of the best among his lot when he had caught good fishes but a dry fishing spell of eighty-four days had led his contemporaries to call him “salao” – the worst kind of unlucky. In this respect the Sea became the domain where the old man could assert his individuality and his existential identity. It became the decider of whether or not Santiago was worthy enough to have a disciple in Manolin. However, examining the relationship between the man and the sea merely in this light would be an act of oversimplification on part of the readers since this relationship has a lot more to it than meets the eye.
Noticing the parable form of the novel a lot of critics
have told that the relationship between the old man and the sea symbolizes the relationship between man and the world. Just like the Sea with its magnificent marlins had treasures hidden for fishermen who would dare to venture deep; even the world rewards for humans who would show the courage of claiming them by sailing uncharted waters. One just has to take a chance like Santiago did. Just like the world sometimes throws hurdles on the path of the attainment of one’s cherished goals, the Sea made it impossible for Santiago to take home his bounty of the Marlin. Through the unique relationship of Santiago and ther sea, the parable teaches the lesson that sometimes defeat is inevitable but man can still emerge victorious through the nobility of his human striving.
An examination of the relationship between Santiago
and the Sea would benefit much by the adoption of a post-structuralist perspective through the binary of la mar and el mar and the archetypal binary of the giver and the taker. In the Spanish language the Sea or the mar had both masculine and feminine attributes depending upon the way in which it was being viewed. Focusing on the la mar and el mar binary, Hemingway writes – “He always thought of the Sea as la mar which is what people call her in Spanish when they love her………. Some of the younger fishermen, those who used buoys as floats for their lines and had motor-boats, bought when the shark livers had brought much money, spoke of her as el mar which is masculine”. This passage underpins how an analysis of this binary is crucial to arrive at a better understanding of the old man’s relationship with the sea. The younger fishermen who would consider the sea as el mar or masculine had a very professional relationship with the sea. They had no respect for the sea and thus they were alienated from nature. Santiago the old fisherman who regarded the sea as la mar, a benevolent mother figure was guided by some ethical values and understood the sea from his depth of experience of many years as a fisherman. His close affinity with the Sea was apparent in his love for the many inhabitants of the water and through his knowledge and insight into the mysteries of the Sea. This intimate relationship gets all the more impressed upon the reader through a contrast with the crude, feeling-less relationship of the younger fishermen with the self-same sea.
The other crucial binary to the understanding of the
equation between Santiago and the sea is that of the giver and the taker. The Sea in this novel is both the preserver and the destroyer for Santiago. In the beginning of the novel, Santiago is shown to be victimized by the destructive streak of the sea which denied him fish for eighty-four long days and left him at the mercy of his student-companion Manolin and generous café owners. However, soon the role of the sea as the preserver in Santiago’s life gets identified when the Sea unites him with a Marlin fish larger in size than his skiff and provides him with nourishment in form of eatable fishes such as the tuna and dolphins. At one point the roles of preserver and destroyer was performed by the Sea almost simultaneously as the marlin in refusing to line along with Santiago’s skiff began to drain him off his life completely. The malevolence of the sea was dramatized again with the arrival of the sharks. The old man fought a gallant battle with the shark and in turn lost his gaff, tiller and his knife which resulted in the sharks taking away the best part of his marlin. Upon being viewed from the perspective of the second binary, the old man’s relationship with the Sea becomes one of the “struggle for survival”.
Thus we see that the relationship between the old
man the sea enhances the pleasure of critically appreciating the novel by the virtue of its interpretation on various levels. What Hemingway intended for this relationship to be cannot be ascertained for sure. However, literature being subjective, this relationship has nothing to lose and much to gain by critical conjecture.