AESTHETICS OF NATURE IN MARGARET ATWOOD’S THE BLIND ASSASSIN

Authors

  • S. Joy Isabella
  • J. Sundarsingh

Keywords:

MARGARET ATWOOD, NATURE, THE BLIND ASSASSIN, AESTHETICS OF NATURE

Abstract

Nature has the power to teach, elevate, sooth and console. It offers rich experiences of joy and a sense of peace to all who seek its beauty and grace. It invokes an incomparable interest to women who seek its extraordinary beauty. It offers knowledge to the needy, lovely scenery to the lovers of Nature. The myriad forms and phenomena around us are nothing but the various manifestations of the nature. This paper explores how the characters experience nature in Margaret Atwood’s novel The Blind Assassin.
There is an indissoluble bond between nature and human beings. This realization would fill one with universal love and all the characters associated with nature. Here is no doubt that nature is the abode of God and all the beauty that nature unfolds is a mighty manifestation of God"s wisdom and power.

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Published

20-06-2011

How to Cite

S. Joy Isabella, & J. Sundarsingh. (2011). AESTHETICS OF NATURE IN MARGARET ATWOOD’S THE BLIND ASSASSIN. TJELLS | The Journal for English Language and Literary Studies, 1(1), 5. Retrieved from https://brbs.tjells.com/index.php/tjells/article/view/28