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Moses, Man of the Mountain
- 28 statements
- 4 feature instances
- 8 referencing feature instances
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Moses, Man of the Mountain is a 1939 novel by Zora Neale Hurston, author of Their Eyes Were Watching God. It's the story of the life of Moses from the Pentateuch, but a somewhat different Moses from what most people know. This is the Moses of African folklore: a wizard, a voodoo man, a man of Nature.Suten-Rech Moses, son of Pharaoh Rameses I's daughter, is bright, compassionate, and a decorated war hero by the age of twenty-five. However, he is disturbed by the plight of the enslaved Hebrews, which no one else in the palace seems concerned about. One day he is forced to take matters into his own hands and kills an abusive Egyptian overseer. In an attempt to give the Hebrews some degree of self-government he appoints a Hebrew in his place, which the other Hebrews are none to happy about. Bitter and disillusioned by this ingratitude, Moses flees Egypt.Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_1'); })In the land of Midian he meets a man named Jethro, a local chief with mysterious powers who claims to have found the one true God, who lives on nearby Mount Sinai. Moses settles down in Midian, becoming Jethro's apprentice in magic and marrying his oldest daughter. After many years he goes up to meet the god on Mount Sinai, who tells him to go back to Egypt and bring the Hebrews out of slavery. Moses is reluctant, but agrees.Moses returns to Egypt and confronts the current pharaoh, his uncle Ta-Phar. Ta-Phar refuses to free the Hebrews, but Moses is able to wear him down with disastrous plagues. Moses leads the Hebrews out of Egypt and gives them a new God and new laws, but as they approach the Promised Land he discovers that in their hearts they are still slaves. He therefore keeps them in the wilderness for forty years, teaching what it truly means to be free, and what they must do if they want to remain a free people.Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_2'); })Highly allegorical, the story deals with themes of oppression, its effects on a people's psyche, freedom, and the cost of freedom. | |
Moses, Man of the Mountain | fetched |
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Moses, Man of the Mountain | parsed |
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Moses, Man of the Mountain / int_5fa937a | type |
CompletelyMissingThePoint | |
Moses, Man of the Mountain / int_5fa937a | comment |
Completely Missing the Point: Aaron and Miriam, Moses's supposed siblings, care more about their power among the Hebrews and material wealth than freeing the Hebrew people. The Hebrews in general, at least the generation brought out of Egypt, refuse to work for their freedom because they feel God will give it to them. | |
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Moses, Man of the Mountain / int_acecb17d | type |
Chekhov's Skill | |
Moses, Man of the Mountain / int_acecb17d | comment |
Chekhov's Skill: Several of the "miracles" Moses performs in the wilderness are based on things he learned on his first trip to Midian. Under Jethro's tutelage Moses becomes particularly skilled at summoning plagues of vermin, which he once does to drive off an annoying relative of Jethro's. | |
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Complaining About Rescues They Don't Like | |
Moses, Man of the Mountain / int_efbfe117 | comment |
Complaining About Rescues They Don't Like: The Hebrews are pretty ungrateful about Moses freeing them from slavery, and at several points they demand to be returned to Egypt. | |
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