Title: Stories of Growth (4) : A Black Girl
1Stories of Growth (4) A Black Girls
- Individuation through Separation from (M)Other
Annie John (1985) - by Jamaica Kincaid
2Stories of Growth w/ Support Obstacles?
3(1) Family Mothers Friends
- In the Caribbean Area
- Wide Sargasso Sea mother(s) and friend Tia
- Abeng mother and friend Zoe
- Sugar Cane Alley grandmother, teachers and
friends - Bright Thursday -- grandmother, mother, the
father who is aloof, the school she finally runs
to - West Africa -- The House at Sugar Beach Helene
(Congo) and her friend Eunice (the natives) - South Africa Music of the Violin mother vs.
classmates - India -- Gainda Sri Lanka -- Pigs Cant Fly
mother cousins - Iran Persepolis grandmother and mother
4(1) Family Lost Fathers/Parents
- In the Caribbean Area
- Wide Sargasso Sea
- Sugar Cane Alley
- Bright Thursday the father who is aloof
- Brazil Central Station
- Kurds Turtle Can Fly
5(2) Aspiring Child/Youth Educational System
- West Africa Half of a Yellow Sun
- Yesterday, Bright Thursday
- South Africa -- Music of the Violin
- the Caribbean Sugar Cane Alley
- Iran -- Persepolis
6(3) Society War, Racial Conflicts Other Social
Problems
- In West and South Africa? Civil War
- A Long Way Gone -child solder
- War Games
- Yesterday AIDS
- Pakistan -- Earth
- Kurds Turtle Can Fly
- Haiti Children of the Sea
7(3) Society Local Cultures
- West Africa
- War Games, Half of a Yellow Sun debia
- South Africa Yesterday, Prophetess --Sangoma
- Brazil Central Station taking photos with a
saints image - The Caribbean Area -- WWS Sugar Cane Alley
8Annie John as a Bildungsroman
Major Question stories of forced separation in
WSS, Abeng and Bright Thursday Why the
voluntary and permanent separation from Antigua
and from her mother in particular?
- Kincaid I was always being told I should be
something, and then my whole upbringing was
something I was not it was English (Cudjoe 219).
9Outline
- Ref. Kincaid
- About colonialism and Antigua
- And her mother
- Annie John
- Circling Hand
- Ref. A Walk to the Jetty
10Jamaica Kincaid Bio (1)
- Born Elaine Potter Richardson in St. Johns,
Antigua in 1949 lived with her step-father,
mother, and three brothers - father a carpenter and cabinetmaker
- mother a homemaker and political activist.
- Completed her secondary education under the
British system
- Girl http//www.youtube.com/watch?vMiGNbk9PMq0
- Lecture given by Jamaica Kincaid (SWI - Fiction
and Poetry Reading Jamaica Kincaid and Henri
Cole) http//www.youtube.com/watch?vplKETZkFGbM
3640 Introd 4130--Kincaid
11Jamaica Kincaid Bio (2)
- Left Antigua (before its Independence) when she
was 17. - As the eldest of four, and the only girl, she was
apprenticed to a seamstress, then plucked from
school, where she was excelling, and sent to the
US as an au pair ("really a servant") - changed her name to Jamaica Kincaid because her
family disapproved of her writing. (source)
12Antigua
- A lot more blacks than white people
- No experience of freedom apprenticeship
(four-year waiting period) after Emancipation in
1834. Freedom was immediate but total.
(Murdoch 99) - Economy suffers until tourism replaced sugar
industry. - A British colony till 1967.
http//www.geographia.com/antigua-barbuda/aghis01.
htm
13Kincaid on Colonialism Antigua
- Within the structure of the British educational
system imposed upon Antiguans, Kincaid grew to
"detest everything about England, except the
literature" (Vorda 79). - A Small Place rage at colonialism the failure
of Antigua independence - "But nothing can erase my rage . . . for this
wrong can never be made right and only the
impossible can make me still can a way be found
to make what happened not have happened?" - You distorted or erased my history and glorified
your own")
14Kincaid about her mother
- She "should never have had children."
- She loves us when were dying - not when were
thriving because then we dont need her.
(source) - She favors her sons over Kincaid.
15Annie John
- central question
- What makes Annie change her views about her
family and esp. her mother? - pp. 18-19 12-year-old Annies views o her
mother - p. 132-33 136 17-yr-old Annies view
- Why are the mother and the daughter distanced
from each other? - Related issues
- 1. closeness to the mother fathers dominant
role - 2. the mothers teaching (the young-lady
business) - 3. The mothers social position and her
relations with the father
16Mother-Daughter Relationship in Annie John
- Major Social Factors
- Caribbean society a male-dominated society in
which the men are allowed to be irresponsible
about housework, and enjoy sexual relationships
outside marriage. - Mother as a social institution to teach her
girl to be socialized ( Englishized lady-like)
17Mother-Daughter Relationship in Annie John
Examples
- Figures in the Distance Pre-occupation with
death a girl without a mother a shameful
thing (8) - The Circling Hand
- Pre-Oedipal symbiosis with the mother ?
- Forced to separate herself from the mother sent
to be educated, witnessing the parents sexual
intercourse (primal scene).
18Annies independence process
- Columbus in Chain mainly about her rebellion
at school, resisting British education at the
end, mother is turned into a crocodile p. 84 - Gwen (a perfect pretty type) The Red Girl
(lower-class) -- Exploring her own sexuality. - Somewhere, Belgium age 15,
- out for a boy
- mother and daughter with two faces (one polite
and loving, and the other hateful) called a slut
by her mother after conversing with a boy --
Well, like mother like daughter (p. 102) - wants a trunk of her own.
19Annies independence process (2)
- The Long Rain
- Fascination for the father (112-13)
- Illness grandmothers (Ma Chess) care-taking --
a substitute for the mother (pp. 125-26) - A Walk to the Jetty -- Leaving Antigua
- Waking up with Sadness and Readiness to leave
- Taking note of everything around her (repetition
of never for the last time ? sadness - Resentment against her parents and the
environment readiness. )
20The Circling Hand Questions for Group
Discussion
- 1. Mother-Daughter Relationship
- 1-1 Describe the mother and daughters closeness.
- What kind of gender model does the mother offer
Annie? e.g. p. 13-14 25 - What's the significance of the trunk? P. 20
- 1-2 What role does the father take in this part?
How does the mother relate to both of them. How
do we know more about the society thru their
relationships? - Optional Do you remember being close to your
mother, or father, and admiring them? Since when
did the relationship change? - 2. What does the title mean? What finishes her
happy childhood and love for the family (p. 32).
Only the parents sex?
21The Circling Hand
- 1. The symbiotic stage (pp. 13-25)
- Examples of the daughters complete
identification with the mother. pp. 13- 19 - -- Physical intimacy (bathing) 14
- -- protective 14-15
- -- Mothers gender role model shopping doing
housework cooking, washing clothes p. 13-14
25 - -- admiring the mother 18-19 be like the mother
p. 139 - -- sharing cloth
- -- continuation of identity -- the Trunk P. 20
(the mothers past Annies souvenirs
story-telling)
22The Circling Hand 1-2
- 1. The symbiotic stage (pp. 13-25)
- -- the fathers role outsider has a lot of
women - -- Someone to be sympathized with (Anniewants to
give him a mother) - -- Served and mothered by his wife p. 24
- A Walk
- -- builds and makes a lot of things in the house
- -- social factor p. 132 35 years older than
his wife sickly
23The Circling Hand (2)
- 2. Separation not just by the parents
- the changes at age 12
- in Annies body p. 25 p. 27 (? Persepolis)
- her schooling -- p. 29
- The changes in the mothers attitudes
- The mothers distanciation
- her dresses p. 26 trunk ritual p. 27
differentiation 28-29 - the mothers expectations of her
- young lady business pp. 28-29 turning her
back at Annie 28 - Housework 29-30
24The Circling Hand (2)
- Why does the mother do this? Is it necessary
for the mother to be so stern? - Possible Reasons
- The mothers preoccupation with housework
- Her failure to smooth the transition from
Annies childhood to puberty - Her being influenced by the dominant British and
patriarchal values.
25The Circling Hand (3)
- 3. the primal scene
- the importance of the circling hand? P. 30
- What role does the father take after this scene?
- Context Annies wanting to reconquer her
mother
26The mothers hand
- 1. Mothers Hands
- -- taking care of Annie
- -- doing housework
- white, bony, dead, left out in the elements
distanced from her - a revision of feminine Oedipus as well as the
primal scene - Annie recognizes the fathers power quite late
power conveyed thru the mothers serving hand. -
27A Walk to the Jetty Questions for Group
Discussion
- 4. Is Annies separation from her family and the
past inevitable and absolute? e.g. 130-131
never 133-34-35 for the last time Arent
there contradictions between her readiness to
leave and her sadness? - Is it appropriate for Annie to criticize her
parents? Are you sympathetic with her hatred of
the mother? Pp. 133 - 5. What does she reject in leaving the place?
Can you relate to her need to leave the place
forever? pp. 144-148 - 6. Describe the narrative style of one-day
progress with flashbacks, the use of repetition
and/or symbolic descriptions
28A Walk to the Jetty separation after separation
- A. From Mother
- (Circling Hand 1.different dressesAs
bitterness and hatred - 2. Enforced lady education mothers
disappointment - 3.stop kids talking---awareness
- 4.after the turning pointAll that was
finished talk back.) -
- 5.complete separation--- never to be fooled
again hypocrite 147 - 6. Talk back 136 mothers image degraded
- 7. On guard against the mothers love and
expectations 147
29A Walk to the Jettythe Past
- Walking away from the past (memories of
education and transitional objects) - Education 138-143
- Ms. Dulcie the seamstress, p. 138
- first experience of buying things 139
- saving money at 6 140 a pair of glasses at 8
- Porcelain dog and library 142
- Memories -- Transitional objects interests that
she has outgrown glasses (141), porcelain dog
(142) - Memories -- Love Mother Gwen 137
- ? cannot deny the mothers good intention in
educating her and love for her - ? do we need to reject things we are no longer
interested in or people who are no longer on a
par with us?
30A Walk to the Jetty separation from the social
norms (2)
- B. From the social norm(and oppression)
- 1. to be a lady ? e.g. exploited by Ms Dulcie
138 - 2. marriage ? sexual inequality
- 3. Gwen constrained by marriage and ignorance
p. 137 - 4. The community does not even want to say
good-bye 136-37
31A Walk to the Jetty
- Contradictory signs of independence signs of
nostalgia in this chapter? - Independence vs. Nostalgia
- Name, address,
- separation her listing of what she never wants
to see joy at not having to see them. pp.
130-132. - her attention at whats hers and whats on her
p. 134-35. - remembering a lot
- Fear of vacancy and of hole
- the moment of getting out of bed 133
- fear of falling into the water 143
- contradictory feelings at the wharf 144 145,
146, 147
32Walking to Empty Oneself
- Does not know why it is an absolute departure for
her 134 - Passing through the place as if she were in a
dream 143 - Resisting the mother when she says shes always
her mother. ? Resisting the permanent control. - Emptied out at the end
33Conclusion Separation from the (m)other
- The mother is already an disadvantaged Other.
(M/Other) - stories of forced separation with social
factors or voluntary and permanent separation
??? - WSS Annette-- post-emancipation society
- Abeng Kitty caught in between black and white
skin - Bright Thursday Myrtle eager to whiten her
daughter. - Annie John Annie, from the patriarchal and
colonial society of Antigua