The two stories of Peter Pan and The Blind Side does a perfect job of showing excellent examples of motherly archetypes, and their impact on society and literature. A motherly archetype can represent many things in different stories, but in Peter Pan and The Blind Side, the type of motherly archetype that is being expressed is a caretaker. A caretaker is a character that consistently supports, protects, and provides for other characters who are unable to look after themselves. These two different stories are 105 years apart but they still hold the same motherly archetype that has stayed all throughout the years. In Peter Pan, Wendy is asked by Peter to go to Neverland with him to be a mother to the lost boys. While she’s there she looks after …show more content…
them and reminds them to be careful. She takes in these boys and positions herself in a motherly role, just like what is shown in The Blind Side.
Leigh-Anne Touhy is a mother of two kids, then takes in this African-American boy who is struggling to fend for himself, she provides for him, and looks after his well being. Both stories immediately show their roles as caretakers and the character whom they are helping which sets up a perfect caretaker role. In both stories, Wendy and Leigh-Anne added such a loving, and almost hero like touch that people love. Motherly archetypes typically have a very large impact and direct the story. As Leigh-Anne and her husband take in this African-American boy, she changes his life by becoming his legal parents and providing him with more than he could ever ask for, but just as much as she changes his life, he is changing hers. In Peter Pan, Wendy does an amazing job of introducing this idea of what a mother really is, the responsibilities of a mother, and the impact it has on society. Curly, one of the lost boys explains the idea of what Wendy was to them, “A lady to take care of us at last” (J.M. Barrie). Throughout the stories, motherly archetypes are demonstrated very well, but it still brings tough challenges to both of the
caretakers. In both stories, neither Wendy nor Leigh-Ann really knew what they were doing when they put themselves in that motherly role to look after those characters. In Leigh-Annes case, she had never raised an African-American boy before, and she didn't know the racial challenges it would bring her, and her family, “you threaten my son, you threaten me” (Leigh-Anne Touhy). In Peter Pan, Wendy was still a child and still needed a mother herself, but she also didn't know how to take care of the lost boys in Neverland because they grew up in such a different culture than her. Both Wendy and Leigh-Anne hold incredible roles as they demonstrate such loving, caretaker rolls, as it brings challenges themselves. They protect the characters who can't look after themselves and perfectly execute the idea of motherly roles. Both stories the caretakers willingly put themselves in the role of a mother, and through the challenges, they face they still continue to hold true to the motherly role that has stayed in literature throughout time.
Are all mothers fit for motherhood? The concept of motherhood is scrutinized in the stories “The Rocking Horse Winner” and “Tears Idle Tears”. In “The Rocking Horse Winner” by D.H Lawrence the mother, Hester, unpremeditatedly provokes her son into providing for her through gambling. In the story “Tears Idle Tears” by Elizabeth Bowen, Mrs. Dickinson disregards her son’s emotions and puts more emphasis in her appearance than her son’s wellbeing. Hester and Mrs. Dickinson both were inadequate mothers. Both the mothers were materialistic, pretended to love their offspring, and their dominance hindered their children’s progress in life.
Janie's Grandmother is the first bud on her tree. She raised Janie since she was a little girl. Her grandmother is in some respects a gardener pruning and shaping the future for her granddaughter. She tries to instill a strong belief in marriage. To her marriage is the only way that Janie will survive in life. What Nanny does not realize is that Janie has the potential to make her own path in the walk of life. This blinds nanny, because she is a victim of the horrible effects of slavery. She really tries to convey to Janie that she has her own voice but she forces her into a position where that voice is silenced and there for condemning all hopes of her Granddaughter become the woman that she is capable of being.
The two women were like day and night because they were very different. Leigh Ann on one hand seemed to have had it all together as to where Michael’s real mother was dealing with more serious issues. Leigh Ann has had her children with her since birth and Michael’s mom lost custody of them when he was seven. With that being said, one might become to think that since Leigh Ann has raised both of her children the right way, then she is best fit to raise Michael. However; on the other hand, one may feel as though Michael’s real mother may deserve another chance at raising him due to the fact that he is ‘her’
Dorothy, the Tin Man, Scarecrow, and the Cowardly Lion leaves the Emerald City and head back through the forest. The wicked witch of the west commands her army of flying monkeys to bring Dorothy and Toto to her. She warns them to be careful with the handling of the ruby slippers; these slippers in her possession would give her ultimate power. The army of monkeys, flies through the sky, grab Dorothy and fly away with her. They also grab Toto, leaving the Tin Man, Scarecrow, and Cowardly Lion behind. Dorothy is not afraid of the witch, but begs her for Toto. The witched bargains with Dorothy for the ruby slippers. Dorothy remembers being told by Glenda not to remove the slippers from her feet. However, she relents and offers the ruby slippers
A mother is someone that would risk a speeding ticket to get her child to a hospital. A mother is someone that cooks for her family delicious food. A mother is someone that loves her children, even when they disrespect her. A mother is someone who risks all she has for her children. A mother is a HERO! The qualities of a hero are being intelligent, caring, and courageous. Two heroes that display these aspects are Odysseus from the epic The Odyssey and a modern mother. Odysseus, a soldier and a leader, on his journey back from the war of Troy, let the Cyclopes eat his men. In contrast, a modern mom saves her children by rushing to the hospital to save them.
After witnessing the too realistic veldt, the parents begin to consider locking the nursery up in fear. Contrarily enough, however, the children had not feared the nursery like their parents had; instead, they had viewed the nursery as their “second parents.” A plausible enough concept, considering that the children had spent more time with it than with their actual parents. Again, this development, as could be inferred from the quote, “You know how difficult Peter is about [the nursery] … And Wendy too.
Nanny, Janie’s guardian, is a big influence in her life. Nanny means well for Janie because she had been a slave and wishes for Janie to live the life she could not. This causes Nanny to push expectations of early womanhood upon Janie. In the beginning of the book,
When intensive mothers are busy with thier responsibilities in the public sphere, due to their belief that a mother is the central caregiver, their temporary replacement must exclusively be female (Hays 414). Even with a female nanny who “leaves the place in a mess, makes a petty point of not putting the dishwasher on […], never gives the correct change from the supermarket and “loses” all the receipts” (Pearson 84), Kate still makes every effort to keep the nanny in her family. From the perspective of intensive mothers, men are not capable of providing the same quality of care that a woman is able to provide (Hays 414). From a gender essentialist perspective, Kate argues that “Emily and Ben need me, and it’s me that they want. […] Daddy is the ocean; Mummy is the port, the safe haven they nestle in to gain the courage to venture farther and farther out each time” (Pearson 169). Therefore, intensive mothers find “alternate mothers,” that is, credentialed female child-care providers (Hays 412) such as Paula, Kate’s nanny, as well as Jo, Alice’s nanny who are able to promote the intellectual enrichment of their
Barrie presents Mr. Darling as the worker of the family, a proud businessman. He persistently demands respect and obedience from his wife, children, and Nana the dog. As well as this, he boasts to Wendy that Mrs. Darling not only loves him, but respects him. This outlook is linked to the stereotypical view of the male gender as the main source of income, with a resilient disposition and a necessity for order. When Mrs. Darling talks to him about Peter Pan, he dismisses her concerns, suggesting indifference and a lack of concern for others’ views.
Mr. Darling, Mrs. Darling, Wendy, and Peter Pan all embody the conventional gender stereotypes and roles of the Victorian era. Paternal and maternal qualities are demonstrated through Wendy and Peter, resulting in the understanding that growing up is inevitable. Like Mrs. Darling, motherhood and acting as a caretaker is attractive to Wendy, while Peter personifies male superiority comparable to Wendy’s father.
In the famous story that we all were read as children, Mary Poppins, the author P.L. Travers depicts a story of an astonishing nanny who arrives at the Banks household to look after the four children, Michael, Jane, and the twins. Jane and Michael live pretty boring lives before Mary Poppins, the nanny, arrives. These two children are very critical thinkers, and it is apparent that they receive these traits from their parents, so because of this Poppins challenges their beliefs when she arrives. Through many adventures and the character of Poppins, Jane and Michael come to learn that there is not always an answer for all of their questions. To their displeasing, the nanny tells them that they have to use their imagination to come up with answers to all of their questions. Eventually, the children are able to discover their childhood, that seemed to be lost, once the nanny leaves. Throughout the book Poppins takes the children on journeys to help them discover what they are missing out on and help them regain that ability to make believe just as every other kid in the world does.
J.M. Barrie’s Peter Pan is a children’s story about a boy who never wants to grow up, but this book portrays many themes, one in particular is the idealization of motherhood. Although the concept of the mother is idealized throughout Peter Pan, it is motherhood itself that prevents Peter Pan and others from growing into responsible adulthood. The novel begins with a scene in the nursery of the Darling household, and it ends in the nursery too. The nursery is an important place for the darlings. It is the place Wendy, John, and Michael sleep, and where they are taken care of by the maternal figures of Mrs. Darling, Liza, and their dog, Nana.
Women are crucial to society. They are our voices, and they revolutionize our people. More importantly, mothers are a big part of our society. J.M Barrie’s Peter Pan is a magic-filled story about a mischievous young boy named Peter, and his tribe, the Lost Boys, who explore and go from raising themselves to attaining a mother. This story can be studied under the lens of the Feminist Critical Theory, which focuses on women empowerment and their outstanding role in society. Literature allows society to explore this role, which J.M Barrie displays impeccably in his book. Barrie’s book definitively presents Wendy’s journey from childhood to motherhood, her role in the development of Peter and the Lost Boys, and the idealization of women. Peter
M Barrie in 1911. Peter Pan is the protagonist in Barrie’s fiction novel. To explain Peter Pan’s life in the novel, let’s begin with the setting known as Neverland which is where Peter Pan lived. In Neverland, kids who never want to grow up live there, and Peter Pan as well as a group of kids known as the “lost boys” lived there happily. That being said, we will derive some characteristics Barrie illustrates in his original text to describe Peter Pan. Peter Pan is portrayed as a young boy, according to Barrie’s text, Peter Pan replies to Wendy’s question regarding his age as “I don’t know… I’m quite young… I ran away the day I was born” (Barrie, Chapter 3), therefore it can be assumed Peter Pan is a young boy, with no parents in Neverland. Peter’s intention is to never grow up and have fun. In Neverland, Peter is the captain of the lost boys, and they only look forward to having a great time together in the forests of Neverland. Peter’s description by Barrie implies that he is nice and an innocent young child that does not believe in aging or becoming an adult. Thus he encourages other young children to pertain a childhood perception. The author gives the audience enough detail about Peter’s character and ideology, although, the author does not mention much physical composition. This is to give the reader the liberty to picture Peter Pan’s physical persona in our imagination, therefore letting our imagination create
Whenever you see a movie, or read a book about a mother and child bond, there is always a common theme involved no matter which country you are in, Protection. The mother is usually the one protecting the child. In Survival, by Margaret Atwood, she states that women in Canadian short stories are important in regards to protecting their young. They can help them out of situations, or save them from danger. However, they can also be shown as the victims, facing struggles in their own daily lives. Mothers are of great importance to Canadian short stories and can be shown in and characterized in many different ways.