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Representations Of Masculinity And Femininity In Miguel Street

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 7.87
  Total Words: 1967
  Total Characters: 9544
  Number of Sentences: 127


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 15.49
  Characters per Words: 4.85


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 67.12
  Fog Scale Level: 11.01
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 7.75  

Representations of Masculinity and Femininity in Miguel Street


     It has been said about V.S. Naipaul's novel Miguel Street that  "One of
the recurrent themes... is the ideal of manliness" (Kelly 19).  To help put into
focus what manliness is, it is important to establish  a definition for
masculinity as well as its opposite, femininity.  Masculinity is defined as
"Having qualities regarded as characteristic of men and boys, as strength, vigor,
boldness, etc" while femininity is defined as "Having qualities regarded as
characteristic of women and girls, as gentleness, weakness, delicacy, modesty,
etc" (Webster).  The charcters in Miguel Street have been ingrained with the
pre- conceived notions of the roles that Trinidadian society dictates for men
and women.  Naipaul not only uses these notions to show the differences of the
sexes, but takes another step in telling  anecdotes of  characters showing their
anti-masculine and anti- feminine features.  This will lead to the discovery
that our definitions of masculinity and femininity prove that those
characteristics apply to the opposite sex in which the women often act like men,
and the men often act like women.  All of this will be discussed through looking
at both male and female characters in the book as well as the boy narrator of
the book.

     Finding examples of manliness are found with great ease considering that
12 of the 17 stories in some way deal with the theme of manliness (Thieme 24).
It doesnt take long before the first example, a carpenter named Popo, is
introduced. In the chapter titled "The Thing Without A Name" we are told that
"Popo never made any money. His wife used to go out and work and this was easy ,
because they had no children.  Popo said ' Women and them like work. Man not
made for work" ( Naipaul 17).  This attitude immediately makes Popo stand out
from the rest of the men of Miguel Street. Hat (a character that will be
discussed later) deems Popo as a "man- woma...

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