Carson Mccullers Essay, Research Paper
Carson McCullers
Having lived a difficult life made Carson McCullers a very strong minded person. Born into a highly respectable family with moderate means, she received an opportunity to play the piano at a very young age. McCullers was the oldest of three children that were born to highly regarded jewelers. At a tender age of seventeen she was diagnosed by doctors as having pneumonia with complications , but later was found to have rheumatic fever. Her Grandfather owned two thousand acres that had 75 slaves keeping it active. These acres were ruined by a fire while her grandfather was still alive and well (Magill, Survey 1212). She married once, but held other relationships while she went away for school in New York City (Baechler 280). She had a divorce a little while after that, leading her into a lonely and sad life that she shared with her aging mother. Her adventures brought out her feelings and she expressed them through her pieces of writing. In her novel The Member of the Wedding, McCullers used bizarre and tortured characters who have disparate purposes and significant meanings. McCullers makes Frankie Addams the most unfortunate character of the book. Frankie is a twelve year old girl trapped within her own mind in a short three days in the book (Hile 153). Being the central character, she is held responsible for the development of the story as well as the existence of the other characters in the novel. Frankie symbolizes the nearly divine nature often assigned to the child at a young age while trying to grow up into a respectable adult. From the first page of the book, McCullers showed Frankie s emotions and difficulties through adult eyes. Frankie does battle with many truths she faces with life, but is too young to fully understand the realities that obscure those truths ( Magill, Masterpieces 308). Her first encounter with facing reality is when her brother, Jarvis, announces his engagement to Janis Evans. Frankie envisions of becoming a member of her brother s wedding as well as attending the honeymoon with them. She holds a belief within herself that would make her belong to the world if she goes with them after the immense ceremony (Hile 161). Two days before the wedding, she finds herself telling everyone she sees on the street about the wedding. Frankie holds many dreams of adventures that they are going to share as a group when they leave for the honeymoon. She is unable to look at the situation in a realistic way and understand how they feel about her going. She fights frantically after the wedding celebration when she finds out she can not attend the honeymoon alongside the newlyweds (Magill, Masterpieces 307). Beside her lack of understanding reality, she is worried about the way she looks. Frankie criticizes everything about herself. She worries about being too tall for her age and her gawky frame. She often has wishes at night about her hair, wanting it longer or shinier (Magill, Masterpieces 307). Some of the girls in town call her a freak or a lanky girl with skinned elbows. The older girls also are a part of many clubs, but never ask Frankie to join. She feels very rejected and blames her looks and character on the separation from her peers (Baechler 284). It is hard for her at first as a little girl, but as she grows older she isolates herself in her dark kitchen. She usually plays cards or talks for hours with her maid Berenice and her cousin John. Her loneliness comes at a young age when her mother dies. From that day on, she feels sad and lonely throughout the long hours of each day (Magill, Masterpieces 307). 6 Frankie s tortured and angry side is also shown from beginning to end in the book. McCullers did not make Frankie out to be the typical young lady. She gets in too much trouble when out of the house, so she mostly passes her days with John and Berenice. She feels very isolated and limited to seeing those two people. This makes her go into sudden rages against them. In one incident, she tries to throw a kitchen knife at the cook, but instead she finds it within herself to throw it at the stairway door missing both Berenice and John. She tries running away on several different occasions as well. Many times throughout the three days of the story, she does not realize what she wants to come out of everything (Magill, Survey 1215-9). Frankie s behavior projects the universal feeling of lo
Works Cited
Baechler, Lea, Ed. Modern American Women Writers. New York: Charles Scribner s Sons, 1991. Hile, Kevins, ed. Authors and Artists for Young Adults. Detroit: Gale, 1994. Magill, Frank N., ed. Magill s Survey of American Literature. Vol 4. New York: Salem, 1991. Magill, Frank N., ed. Masterpieces of American Literature. New York: Harper Collins, 1993.
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