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A trigger of conflict in “To Build A Fire”

Yangsun Yun

English 10 EHS
This essay analyzes the effect of the Yukon setting on the conflict inside Jack

London's "To Build a Fire." The crazily cold and harsh conditions of the environment become

an energetic drive, forming and forcing the struggle between character and nature. Through a

practical breakdown, this essay explores how the background triggers struggle, contributing

to the subject of man versus nature.

Jack London's "To Build a Fire" illustrates the ruthless background of the Yukon Wild

inside the Klondike Gold Surge. The setting's freezing, harsh conditions work as an effective

trigger for conflict inside the story, creating an opposing relationship between the character

and the environment. This exposition means to provide a reasonable examination of how the

Yukon setting impacts the struggle within the story, looking at the outside and inside battles

confronted by the main character.

The Yukon setting sets up nature as an imposing enemy, setting the organization for

struggle.. The severe cold becomes such a tireless condition that the character must fight back

with each step. London's distinctive descriptions of the withering wind and desensitizing

temperatures make an air where survival pivots, effectively exploring the opposing

relationship between the man and his cruel environment.

The struggle is most obvious in the protagonist's desperate battle to construct and

keep up a fire. The setting, with its firm scene and icy conditions, changes this

straightforward work into a life-and-death challenge. The struggle aggravates as the man

fights against the components, highlighting the unstableness of survival within the cruel

Yukon environment. Each misfortune in his endeavor to torch a fire adds layers to the

conflict, underscoring the protagonist's powerlessness.

The outside struggle between the man and the common elements reflects the internal

conflict of the character. His underestimation of the environment and overestimation of his

abilities make for an inner struggle of hubris versus lowliness. The setting, with its
threatening conditions, boosts this inner struggle, emphasizing the desperate results of

thinking little of the control of nature

The setting-induced struggle serves as a vehicle for investigating broader subjects

inside the account. The man's worthless battle against the immovable Yukon speaks to the

variety of society's constant fight against the powers of nature. The struggle gets to be an

illustration of the idea of mankind within the context of the separated and impressively

characteristic world, highlighting the results of thinking little of the control of the

environment

The setting implants the battle with a genetic sense of pointlessness and pressure. The

massive, frosty scene becomes a canvas on which the battle unfolds, increasing the stakes and

emphasizing the certainty of the conflict's result. The setting's contribution to the pressure

within the account is noticeable, creating a sense of criticalness and worry as the hero faces

the impatient reality of survival

In "To Build a Fire," the Yukon setting isn't simply a view but an energetic and

continuous control that shapes and fuels the conflict inside the story. From the protagonist's

fight against the cold to the desperate attempt to construct a fire, the setting becomes a

motivation for outside and inner conflicts, highlighting the sensitive adjustment between

mankind and nature. Jack London skillfully utilizes the unwelcoming Yukon environment to

weave a story that investigates the significant effect of setting on strife, eventually bringing a

cautionary story about the results of thinking little of the control of the common world.

Reference Page

Jack London. To Build a Fire, (1908). English 10. Excel High School.
https://exceleducation.instructure.com/courses/2488/pages/lesson-1-dot-3-to-build-a-fire?mo
dule_item_id=196335

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