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Symbolism In Boys And Girls By Alice Munro

Decent Essays

In the short story “Boys and Girls,” Alice Munro develops the theme ‘your perception is your reality’ through the use of supporting characters, the narrator, and symbolism. In “Boys and Girls,” the narrator struggles with the societal views placed upon women and how her own personality is in contradiction to that ideal. Firstly, the secondary characters develop the theme by supporting one constant notion in which women are inferior and submissive. The temporal setting is in the late 1940s, after World War I; a time period in which sexism was widely accepted. This prejudice is introduced to the narrator, a young girl, very early on when a businessman commends her for her physical labor, saying “I thought it was only a girl” (4). When …show more content…

She thinks, “the word girl had formerly seemed to me innocent and unburdened like the word child: now it appeared that it was no such thing” (6). It is not long before her iron wall breaks down and she succumbs to the voices of others. At the end of the story, the narrator begins to take an interest in traditionally girly things such as lace and frills. She starts thinking about boys and her emotions become more sporadic as she moves through puberty. The narrator’s final stance on her position in the world is conveyed to the reader when her father remarks “nevermind, she’s only a girl” (12), to which she silently agrees. Third, symbolism is a subtle factor to the creation of the theme. The symbolism in “Boys and Girls” is thought provoking when looked at in the correct light. The narrator faces the decision to either let Flora, a horse set for butchering, free or to lock her up. In this situation, Flora represents the narrator attempting to escape from womanhood and society, which is presented by the butchering. The narrator ultimately lets Flora run free despite knowing that “Flora would never really get away” (10). This state of mind represents the hopelessness of the narrator’s situation and her growing lack of will. In truth, Flora is really the narrator’s last ditch effort in order to escape from herself and from the reality that is rushing toward her. As the reader witnesses the narrator grow up they see her buckle under the pressure of filling a specific

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