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Patriarchal Structures In Jamaica Kincaid's Girl

Decent Essays

Jamaica Kincaid’s “Girl” is a short story that examines the advice that a mother gives her

daughter while she is teaching her how to live a proper life. Aside from teaching her how to

sweep and how to pick good clothing, the mother also teaches her daughter practical advice

about how to make people they do not like feel welcome by their smile. While the short story

appears to be an instructive manual on how to cope with life, by examining the text through tone

and literary style, it is clear that the story is a harsh series of lessons from a mother to daughter,

detailing the difficulties that are unique to women in an oppressive patriarchal society.

The tone of writing that is used throughout the short story is important in the …show more content…

This idea is echoed by Nahrain,

who notes that “all women are similarly oppressed by patriarchal structures and therefore share a

gendered agenda” (498). This concept holds true in the story, that the mother and daughter are

oppressed, and the systematic oppression forces mothers to teach their daughters about the harsh

nature of the world by being harsh to them.

Jamaica Kincaid’s “Girl” is a short story that examines the role that women are related to

in society by oppressive male-dominated structures. While the actual lessons in the story reveal a

great deal about the particular structures, the tone and style employed throughout demonstrate

the fact that the lessons are not harsh for the sake of meanness, but for the sake of teaching one’s

daughter how to survive in such a male-dominated society. These power structures hold a great

deal of prominence even in the present day, and engage the reader to realize the expectations of

the women around them.

Name 4

Bibliography

Bailey, Carol. "Performance And The Gendered Body In Jamaica Kincaid's 'Girl' And Oonya

Kempadoo's Buxton Spice." Meridians: Feminism, Race, Transnationalism 10.2

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