Friday, May 31, 2019

A Destructive Society Exposed in Steven Crane’s Maggie A Girl Of The Streets :: Maggie: A Girl Of The Streets

  A Destructive Society Exposed in Maggie           In Maggie, Stephen Crane deals with poverty and vice, not out of curiosity or to promote debauchery only if as a defiant statement voicing the spirit in slums. Drawing on personal experience, he described the rough and treacherous environment that persisted in the inner-city. By focusing on the Johnsons, Crane personalizes a large tragedy that affected and reflected American society as a whole. His creation of Maggie was to symbolize a person unscathed by their physical environment. through and through Jimmie he attempted to portray a child raised without guidance who turned into his abusive, drunk father. Crane plays Jimmie and Maggie off of each other as opposites. The start and Father are depicted as failed drunken hypocrites and poor role models. Crane skillfully characterizes and stereotypes the personalities in Maggie to illustrate the influence of environment and the wretched condit ions in slums. Maggie blos almostd in a mud puddle and represented purity in a corrupt world. When she gets together with Pete she attempted to get out of the world she despised, but instead remained in the slum, unable to escape. Although she is repeatedly abused, Maggie continually picks up the remnants of her life despite being in a worn and sorry state. Jimmie is seen both in a good light, like his sister, as well as an evil and cruel person. In the beginning of the story, he is portrayed as the little aesthesis of Rum Alley. However, that description merely cloaked the brutal fight that he was engaged in and the beating he later gave his sister. Later in the story, Jimmie buys some beer for an old leathery woman, but it is taken by his father. Jimmie protests in the name of justice but is not successful. The crude and abusive relationship with his father disadvantageously cripples his chances to become a benevolent adult. Instilled with poor values he did not see the world as good and pestiferous but rather bad and worse. When he studied human nature in the gutter, and found it no worse than he thought he had reason to believe it he express his pessimistic and cynical attitude towards the world. The Johnsons mother is typical of a drinking, abusive, and careless mother. She stood for a hypocritical, industrializing society that was neglecting its children. When Jimmie tries to take his mother home when she has been kicked out of a criterion she raises her arm and whirls her great fist at her sons face.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.