Mother-Daughter Relationship In Mercé Rodoreda's The Time Of The Doves

2322 Words5 Pages

A mother-daughter relationship has the ability to give a child a sense of self. This connection is a very significant aspect to a daughter 's development as an individual. Mercé Rodoreda’s novel, The Time of the Doves, published originally in Catalan, La Placa del Diamant in 1962, introduces, Natalia, the main character who weaves her way in life making an effort to find a place for herself in the world. Certain characters mentioned in this novel including, her mother, step mother, Ouimet 's mother, Enriqueta, and Eve are important figures that either help or hold back Natalia in her search of her own voice. These female figures, or predecessors should represent a female role model in Natalia’s life, however through many of their actions and …show more content…

“...my father had remarried. My father remarried... And my father remarried and me a young woman all alone in the Placa del Diamant...” (Rodoreda 16). Rodoreda uses repetition in this paragraph to convey Natalia’s feelings of being emotionally stuck, abandoned and isolated. There is a new unit being formed, between her father and her stepmother that she is not necessarily a part of. This repetition is used in an ordinary manner, but she goes back to it psychologically trying to exercise a painful memory, especially this idea of remarriage. Although her father remarries, there is no new mother there. Natalia’s mother has not been replaced, so something has been irrefutably lost. This affects the outlook of Natalie and becomes an originary problem for her existence. The stepmother could have been an important figure in Natalia’s life, however, Natalia only mentions her a couple times, referring to her as her “father’s wife,” rather than give her a name which essentially acknowledging that this relationship lacks an emotional connection. When she is mentioned, it is mostly involving money and what she takes from Natalia. “I got yelled at for it at home because my father took care of the little bit of money I had left over after his wife had taken some out for food” (Rodoreda 38). Also when she comes …show more content…

When Natalia thinks about all kinds of relationships, in terms of these traditional figures such as Adam and Eve, and thinks about what happens in their relationships in biblical, traditional, and patriarchal terms, she begins the relationship with certain conceptions in her mind. She does this without knowing anything about it. Eve, according to many feminist critics, “is a patriarchal ideal of womanhood deprived of her autonomous identity and trained to be obedient to men by male power” (Tanimoto). This is significant because Eve introduces the first impressions about the first wife, womanhood, wifehood in general and motherhood. Eve becomes this archetypical figure of male female relationships and she is accused and rendered submissive in that relationship as the bible depicts it. This ties into how Natalia loses her voice based on this predecessor. What Father Joan makes Eve out to be is a woman who essentially holds back Natalia in her search for her own

Open Document