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 3
Mothering Understood in Amy Tan’s The Kitchen God’s Wife and Christina García’s Dreaming in Cuban Amy Tan’s The Kitchen God’s Wife and Christina García’s Dreaming in Cuban are texts that seem literally and culturally worlds apart in their subject matter since they present portraits of mothers and daughters from Chinese and Cuban heritage cultures, yet they speak volumes in their connections since they reveal the experiences of “hyphenated” 1 women. These women are considered hyphenated both culturally and figuratively: culturally, in that most of them are either Chinese(-)American or Cuban(-)American women, and figuratively, in that they all struggle with the war of living between homelands, fighting to integrate themselves in an emotionally healthy way. In these works, the present in the United States is constantly being shaped by the old and new worlds of their cultural homelands (China and Cuba), including the deadly and disheartening aspects of war itself. In this chapter, illness and death are catalysts that lead to confrontations between mothers and daughters and then to some understanding of the mother’s struggle in rearing her children. In The Kitchen God’s Wife, Winnie Louie and Pearl Brandt are forced into sharing their secrets and emotions due to the threats of Helen Kwong and her daughter Mary, who are friends of the Louie family. Helen threatens to reveal that Pearl has multiple sclerosis and the truth about Pearl’s paternity. In Dreaming in Cuban, her sister Felicia’s untimely death motivates Lourdes del Pino to pack up her daughter Pilar, return to her native Cuba, and come face-to-face with her estranged mother Celia after so many years. The mother-daughter relationships discussed in this chapter reach a greater level 122 of success than those examined in Chapter 2. In Chapter 3, “Mothering Understood in Amy Tan’s The Kitchen God’s Wife and Christina García’s Dreaming in Cuban,” I argue that these novels show how oppressive circumstances, such as the mothers’ childhoods, abusive behavior, father-daughter bonds, and cultural barriers, can create the need for inner strength, secret sharing, therapeutic story-telling, and support networks as coping strategies for the mother characters. Although the mother characters in this chapter mother under some of the same oppressive circumstances as those in Chapters 1 and 2, the outcomes are more positive, but certainly not completely successful. For instance, the circumstances of abusive behavior in Chapter 1 and the mother’s negative childhood experience in Chapters 1 and 2 are also examined in Chapter 3. However, almost all of the daughters are able to find a certain understanding of their mother’s rearing of her children. In Dreaming in Cuban, even when the daughter is not able to totally forgive her mother for her mothering mistakes, she is still left with a way to understand the circumstances under which the mothering takes place by evaluating her mother’s past. In The Kitchen God’s Wife, mother and daughter actually find common ground after they break down barriers and the mother tells her own story. Possible reasons for these more successful relationships may be the more intense connections between granddaughters and the grandmothers (even though the grandmother has serious problems in the relationship with her own daughter), a more genuine interest in mothers and daughters communicating some understanding of the past; and a real effort to explain the mother’s motives and actions through secret sharing and storytelling. 123 The oppressive circumstances under which these mother characters rear their children include the mother’s negative childhood experience, which is significantly marked by her being abandoned by her own mother and the repercussions that this has on her emotional state throughout her life. The act of abandonment is even carried over to the next generations in Dreaming in Cuban due to the mental illness that is caused by the act itself. Some circumstances involve other forms of emotional, sexual, and physical abuse that the mother experiences primarily due to her husband and/or his family. Other oppressive circumstances involve the father-daughter bond and communication barriers. The father-daughter bond becomes can oppressive circumstance in instances where the daughter prefers the father to the mother because tensions exist in the mother-daughter relationship. Communication barriers may include language, cultural, sociopolitical, and/or assimilative differences. The issue of communication barriers in parent-child relationships is probably not rare in any society. However, it has a higher level of importance when discussed in connection with immigrant mothers and their American (U.S.) daughters. The question of hyphenation does, consequently, remain very intricately connected to the issue of assimilation, a highly debated topic in most ethnic immigrant communities in the United States, especially for those whose native language is other than English. Conservative Hispanic (her chosen term) leader Linda Chavez 2 dispels the “dirty word” status of assimilation in Out of the Barrio by describing assimilation as having been “far more gentle a process, by which people from outside the community gradually became part of the community itself. Some groups were accepted more reluctantly than others” (161). Chavez also admits that loss is a part of the process however, but considers the benefits 124 worth the losses. For Tan’s and García’s characters, this issue is much more complicated than Chavez suggests, especially for its women and within their relationships as mothers and daughters. Of course mother-daughter relationships, by nature and circumstances, are usually the subject of emotional spirals with high and low points. Adrienne Rich writes: “Probably there is nothing in human nature more resonant with charges than the flow of energy between two biologically alike bodies, one which has lain in amniotic bliss inside the other, one which has labored to give birth to the other. The materials are there for the deepest mutuality and the most painful estrangement” (226). Rich’s scenario is nowhere more evident than in these texts by Tan and García. In fact, the issues of ethnicity and assimilation make for further complication of the relationships themselves. It is crucially important to understand mothering as a complex job on which certain circumstances may have detrimental effects. Tan’s and García’s mothers deal with prevailing circumstances which may cause either permanent or long-lasting breakdowns in communication efforts between mothers and daughters, without effective coping strategies to balance the burden of rearing their daughters. The mothers, at some points in the works, acknowledge that the deficiency in communication which they experience with their daughters does not only hinge upon their daughters’ inabilities to understand them, or unwillingness to listen to them. Their own silences and secrets weigh heavily on these communication gaps. The non- communication between the mothers and their daughters in The Kitchen God’s Wife and Download 0.54 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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