The Mother Daughter Relationship in Oranges Are not the Only Fruit

935 Words2 Pages

Oranges are not the Only Fruit starts out when Jeanette is seven years old and living with her adoptive parents in England. Jeanette’s mother is very religious, and her father is not around much. She gets pretty lonely; until she is seven years old she has been homeschooled. Her mother is so religious that she even taught Jeanette how to read from the Bible. Because Jeanette’s mother is so religious, she almost brainwashes her daughter to become a missionary. However, once Jeanette begins school things change. When Jeanette is seven years old, she loses her hearing. Her mother and the church think it is something religious when it is really just a sickness, so she is admitted into the hospital. When Jeanette is well again so goes back to school, but things do not improve for her. She is still an outcast. When they do a project in school, Jeanette always picks something to do that is biblical, and because of that she is made fun of.
As Jeanette grows up she realizes that she does not believe everything her church tells her. The thing she disagrees about the most is the sermon they had about the nature of perfection. However, she still is at her mother’s side even though she is starting to have different beliefs.
As she starts her teen years she is starting to think more about romance. She listens to other woman talking about their husbands, and she wonders if she wants one. When Jeanette is walking downtown she meets Melanie, a girl working at a fish stall. Jeanette gets a job washing dishes at an ice-cream shop, and eventually Melanie and Jeanette become friends. Jeanette brings Melanie to church so she can be saved by Jesus. After that, they spend more and more time together which eventually leads into them falling in love ...

... middle of paper ...

...: 79-88. Academic Search Primer. Web. 16 Apr. 2014.
Grosz, E. A., and Elspeth Probyn. "Destruction." Sexy bodies: the strange carnalities of feminism. London: Routledge, 1995. 266-273. Print.
Hinds, Hilary. "Oranges Are not the Only Fruit: Reaching audiences other texts cannot reach." Immortal, invisible: lesbians and the moving image. London: Routledge, 1995. 52-69. Print.
Morrison, Jago. "‘Who Cares About Gender at a Time Like This?’ Love, Sex and the Problem of Jeanette Winterson." Journal of Gender Studies 15.2 (2006): 169-180. Print.
Skeggs, Beverley. "Questioning the 'ordinary' woman: Oranges are not the Only Fruit , text and viewer." Feminist cultural theory: process and production. Manchester: Manchester University Press ;, 1995. 169-170. Print.
Winterson, Jeanette. Oranges are not the only fruit. New York, N.Y.: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1987. Print.

Open Document