In the garden of ashes. The symbolic representation of the water of life and the waste land in Cormac McCarthy’s "The Road"

Szymon Wnuk

Abstract


The aim of this paper is to analyse the motifs of the biblical water of life and the Arthurian waste land in the context of Cormac McCarthy’s novel The Road. The novel’s characters, living in a post-apocalyptic world heading towards annihilation, struggle to survive not only biologically, but also morally, spiritually. As it seems, through a reference to the aforementioned motifs it becomes possible to better understand the value system which The Road’s characters observe. Thus, the water of life, one of the major biblical symbols, is connected to rebirth and fertility; and although McCarthy’s world is permeated by instances of the water of death, the demonic counterpart of the water of life, the novel’s protagonists through their acts resembling baptism attempt to evoke the symbolic meaning of water rites, in this sense partially bringing harmony back to the world. On the other hand, the waste land motif echoes the ritual meant to sustain nature’s vitality, and from which the legends of Perceval and the waste land originate. The reference to these legends creates also certain parallels between both legendary and the novel’s characters, which might be important for the understanding of McCarthy’s piece. Finally, the waste land motif makes it possible to compare The Road to T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land. As it seems, both these texts raise the issue of sustaining the memory of the old, non-existent worlds in order to save morality and spirituality in another world – the one which is destroyed. Arguably, such a message might be enigmatically stated in the last paragraph of The Road.


Keywords


Cormac McCarthy; The Road; the water of life; the waste land; post-apocalypse

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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17951/ff.2016.34.2.113
Date of publication: 2016-12-22 13:37:23
Date of submission: 2016-07-01 15:46:37


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