Mothering modes: analyzing mother roles in novels by twentieth-century United States women writers
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Mothering modes analyzing mother roles in novels by twentieth-c
Chapter 4
Mothering as Transition in Betty Smith's A Tree Grows in Brooklyn and Paule Marshall's Brown Girl, Brownstones The fictional immigrant mothers discussed in this chapter come from impoverished backgrounds, but they are portrayed as having fewer emotional problems than the other mother characters in the previous chapters. The examples in this chapter show mothers who are more positive characters than those previously discussed. They are by no means perfect mothers. For example, Smith’s Katie Nolan openly nurtures her son more than her daughter, and Marshall’s Silla Boyce uses any means necessary to achieve her economic goals. The examples in this chapter also present mothers who do not have nurturing natures and the conflict that it causes for the mother-daughter relationships. In Chapter 4, “Mothering as Transition in Betty Smith's A Tree Grows in Brooklyn and Paule Marshall's Brown Girl, Brownstones," I argue that oppressive circumstances, such as marital stress, socioeconomic issues, nurturance issues, and mother-daughter conflicts, create the need for inner strength, economic security, and women-centered networks as coping strategies for the mother characters. I analyze examples of mothering in stormy, but productive mother-daughter relationships. By “mothering as transition,” I refer to the Bildungsroman experience of the daughter character in each work and how the work shows the positive development of the mother- daughter relationship through the stages of the daughter’s maturation from adolescence to her late teens. During that period, mother and daughter do not always agree. I refer to each mother-daughter relationship as a battle of wills that develops into a mutual respect for each woman’s strength. Throughout the progression of the developmental stages, the 159 mother-daughter relationship makes great gains in mutual understanding, respect, and love. In this final chapter, each mother-daughter pair comes to a mutually successful understanding of their relationship, as in The Kitchen God’s Wife, except that the daughters reach this point as very young women in the examples in Betty Smith’s and Paule Marshall’s novels. Several issues make these mother-daughter relationships more successful than those examples found in the previous chapters: 1) the mother characters discussed are extremely strong, ambitious, intelligent, hardworking, money-conscious women, 2) the daughter characters discussed are also strong, ambitious, intelligent, and hardworking, 3) the mother characters recognize their daughters as younger replicas of themselves, and 4) networks of othermothers are very effective in guiding the daughter to an understanding of her mother. The examples of successful mother-daughter relationships discussed in this chapter show how the right coping strategies can alleviate the negative circumstances under which mothering can take place. However, this relative success does come about as the result of female conflict throughout the adolescence and early womanhood of the daughter protagonists (Francie Nolan and Selina Boyce) in these two Bildungsromane and in spite of socioeconomic, educational, and single-parent hardships for the mothers. Their mothering is constantly affected by the strained connections with their willful daughters, the dissipating relationships with their unsupportive husbands, and the unyielding dominance of their own personalities; in spite of these complications, Brown Girl, Brownstones’s Silla Boyce and A Tree Grows in Brooklyn’s Katie Nolan successfully mother their daughters into women whom they respect and who mirror them, into introspective, outspoken, 160 intelligent, socially conscious women, thereby breaking with the commonly accepted notion that overly strong and/or overly protective mothers rear weak, dependent daughters. In addition to their mothering stories are the many other comparable aspects of these works. The great similarities between A Tree Grows in Brooklyn and Brown Girl, Download 0.54 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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