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The Member Of The Wedding Essay Research

The Member Of The Wedding Essay, Research Paper


The Member of the Wedding by Carson McCullers


is the story of an adolescent girl who triumphs over loneliness and gains


maturity through an identity that she creates for herself in her mind.


It is with this guise that twelve year old Frankie Addams begins to feel


confident about herself and life. The author seems to indicate that one


can feel good about oneself through positive thinking regardless of reality.


The novel teaches that one’s destiny is a self-fulfilled prophesy, seeing


one’s self in a certain light oftentimes creates an environment where one


might become that which one would like to be.


The world begins to look new and beautiful


to Frankie when her older brother Jarvis returns from Alaska with his bride-to-be,


Janice. The once clumsy Frankie, forlorn and lonely, feeling that she “was


a member of nothing in the world” now decides that she is going to be “the


member of the wedding.” Frankie truly believes that she is going to be


an integral part of her brother’s new family and becomes infatuated with


the idea that she will leave Georgia and live with Jarvis and Janice in


Winter Hill. In her scheme to be part of this new unit, she dubs herself


F. Jasmine so that she and the wedding couple will all have names beginning


with the letters J and a. Her positive thinking induces a euphoria which


contributes to a rejection of the old feeling that “the old Frankie had


no we to claim…. Now all this was suddenly over with and changed. There


was her brother and the bride, and it was as though when first she saw


them something she had known inside of her: They are the we of me.” Being


a member of the wedding will, she feels, connect her irrevocably to her


brother and his wife. Typical of many teenagers, she felt that in order


to be someone she has to be a part of an intact, existing group, that is,


Jarvis and Janice. The teen years are known as a time of soul-searching


for a new and grown up identity. In an effort to find this identity teens


seek to join a group. Frankie, too, is deperate for Jarvis and Janice’s


adult acceptance.


Frankie is forced t

o spend the summer with


John Henry, her six year old cousin, and Berenice Brown, her black cook.


It is through her interactions with these two characters that the reader


perceives Frankie’s ascent from childhood. Before Jarvis and Janice arrive,


Frankie is content to play with John Henry. When she becomes F. Jasmine


and an imagined “we” of the couple, she feels too mature to have John Henry


sleep over, preferring, instead, to occupy her time explaining her wedding


plans to strangers in bars, a behavior she would not have considered doing


before gaining this new confidence.


When F. Jasmine tells her plans to Berenice,


the cook immediately warns her that Jarvis and Janice will not want her


to live with them. F. Jasmine smugly ignores the cook’s warning that “you


just laying yourself this fancy trap to catch yourself in trouble.” The


adolescent feels confident and cocky, refusing to believe that her plot


is preposterous. After the wedding and the shattering reality that Frances


(as she is now known) faces, it is evident, from the fact that their refusal


doesn’t crush her, that she has truly turned herself around, and that her


maturity is an authentic and abiding one. At the conclusion of the story,


the now confident Frances is able to plan a future for herself, by herself,


which includes becoming a great writer. She, further, finds a sympathetic


friend who becomes the other half of her new “we.”


Carson McCullers brilliantly portrays a


teenage girl’s maturation through a fabricated feeling of belonging, which


ultimately leads to a true belonging. The reader sees how the girl grows


from a childish “Frankie,” to a disillusioned “F. Jasmine,” and eventually


to a matured Frances. When F. Jasmine questions Berenice as to why it is


illegal to change one’s name without consent of the court, the cook insightfully


responds, “You have a name and one thing after another happens to you,


and you behave in various ways and do various things, so that soon the


name begins to have a meaning.” No matter how we might change externals,


it is only when our innermost feelings are altered that we truly change


and grow.

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