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CHAPTER IV
CONCLUSION
From the analysis in chapter III, it can be concluded that Hannah’s internal
conflicts are her loneliness with her fear of making friends and her desire with her
traumatic experience of having father. From her two internal conflicts, Hannah’s
main internal conflict is her desire of having someone who care of her, whether
father or friend are hindered by her fear and her trauma. When people want
something but they cannot achieve it, they will feel irritated and angry to them
self. The struggle within Hannah’s self which leads to internal conflict changes
her characteristics. Initially, she likes to chat with her friends, she likes to play
with her friends, and she also always cheerful. Her communicative trait turns to
the contrary, she becomes uncommunicative girl. She doesn’t like to interact with
her mother, the only one who she has in the world. This case happens after she
experiences internal conflict.
Beside her change to an uncommunicative girl, she also becomes
apathetic. Her action also goes along with her gloomy face. What she does is the
way she expresses her feeling. She feels lonely. When people feel lonely, they
will feel sad. Sullen and gloomy faces are the common expression when people
feel sad. She is angry with herself but she cannot reveal her feeling. The target to
her angry is people around her, especially her mother. Her internal conflict leads
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example when she becomes uncommunicative to her mother, she leads internal
conflict within her mother.
Hannah’s burden mind actually can lead to her characteristic development.
Finally, from this analysis, it can be shown that internal conflict can influence
characteristic development. The buried desire of ten years old girl really can
change her characteristic in negative way. The development of her characteristics
shows that Hannah has round character, because her characteristics before and