Saturday, April 20, 2013

Q: Quasimodo

Product Details
pic: from amazon.com
The bell ringer of the Notre Dame Cathedral, the hunchback Quasimodo, was created in the story by Victor Hugo to emphasize injustice and superficiality of the bourgeois. Who invokes in the reader a deep and violent sense of sympathy, tragedy and social guilt.

A foundling, Quasimodo who was one eyed with a huge wart on his eye, and a large hunchback, was trained by the Archdeacon of the Cathedral to be a bell ringer, a 'job' which renders him deaf as well.
Poor Quasimodo is a social outcast because of his malformed body and yet nothing the society did could diminish the kindness and love his heart was capable of feeling. His love for the gypsy Esmeralda goes beyond life into death. The tragedy is that even though Esmeralda recognized his kind heart she could not bring herself to overlook the physical deformation of Quasimodo.
All the characters in the book are illusory contradictions in the sense that their physical representation has nothing much to do with their mental or moral makeup. The handsome Captain turns out to be quite a louse. The beautiful Esmeralda turns out to be superficial and incapable of seeing past outer traits. In the same vein, Quasimodo's heart wrenching plight in life is that his physical deformation lies in direct contradiction with his power to love and love purely.



3 comments:

  1. I could never bring myself to read the unabridged version of this story because of Quasimodo. It's utterly sad. And what a beautiful tribute to this beautiful character!

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  2. I must acknowledge that I haven't read the above classic, but will certainly keep it in mind.

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