Activity 3.1.1 – “The Man in Bogota”: My Analysis

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Read below the short, short story of 243 words titled The Man in Bogota by the American author Amy Hempel. (also located in Unit 3 - Resource Folder)

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The police and emergency service people fail to make a dent. The voice of the pleading spouse does not have the hoped-for effect. The woman remains on the ledge – though not, she threatens, for long.

I imagine that I am the one who must talk the woman down. I see it, and it happens like this.

I tell the woman about a man in Bogota. He was a wealthy man, an industrialist who was kidnapped and held for ransom. It was not a TV drama; his wife could not call the bank and, in twenty-four hours, have one million dollars. It took months. The man had a heart condition, and the kidnappers had to keep the man alive.

Listen to this, I tell the woman on the ledge. His captors made him quit smoking. They changed his diet and made him exercise every day. They held him that way for three months.

When the ransom was paid and the man was released, his doctor looked him over. He found the man to be in excellent health. I tell the woman what the doctor said then – that the kidnap was the best thing to happen to that man.                                                                                                       

Maybe this is not a come-down-from-the-ledge story. But I tell it with the thought that the woman on the ledge will ask herself a question, the question that occurred to that man in Bogota. He wondered how we know that what happens to us isn’t good.                                                                                                

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Think about your personal response to the story by answering the following three questions to guide your analysis.

  1. What does the last line of the text have to do with you personally? How can you connect with it? Past? Present? Future?

  2. How much does the text agree or disagree with your view of the world and what you consider to be true or false, right or wrong?

  3. What can you praise about the text? What problems do you find with the text?

A. Firstly, post your written answers to the three questions into your JOURNAL (Journalling 100) in point form (along with the short story for future reference) 

B. Secondly, submit a brief written response in the form of a well written paragraph here (not in a point-by-point answer response to the five questions as you did with your JOURNAL). Your paragraph should be between 75-100 words.

Submission: PDF format. (file size can't be more than 20 MB)