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“ Faces of Madness ” Romantic Love and Class: An American Version in 1950 ’ s.

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Presentation on theme: "“ Faces of Madness ” Romantic Love and Class: An American Version in 1950 ’ s."— Presentation transcript:

1 “ Faces of Madness ” Romantic Love and Class: An American Version in 1950 ’ s

2 Outline Plot Questions Class and Romance William ’ s Romance William ’ s Romance The Mother ’ s The Mother ’ s Class & Gender Inequality in Romance Class & Gender Inequality Conclusion Next Time

3 Plot Beginning: William introduced – his name, family, love of music and hatred of policeman; (1-4) Middle: A. Love and Consequences 1. Jean and William in love; (4- 5) exclusivity and poetry writing; 2. Pregnancy and W ’ s & the parents ’ responses (5- 10) – the money issue and “ morality ” 3. W ’ s mother ’ s intervention (9 - ) vs. the two ’ s feeble attempts at communication 4. Aftermath – Jean sent to her aunt ’ s and William to Nassau (an island in the Caribbean) and then back to school

4 Plot Middle: B Revelation & Search (16-) Harvey vs. Bill; Found: Coralee; Ending: the wedding and Jean

5 Questions What comes in the way of the two lovers? What role does class play in it? Who are mad in the story? And who are victims of their own ‘ romance ’ ? Can we do a psychoanalytic reading of this story?

6 Class & Romance: William, Jean & their Families W – spoiled and isolated – brought up with pets, a car and romantic ideas from opera music (2); -- rebellious (3) and thought everything easy (6) W ’ s family ’ s responses – protective and hypocritical; Jean ’ s family ’ s responses – impressed by W (6); practical and moralistic (6-7) The two families ’ prejudices against each other: “ ordinary people ” pp. 4; 10.

7 William ’ s Romance Believes in the love stories in the opera: p. 2;  His relationship with Jean:  Elements of romance; p. 4  a means to transcend the banal environment;  music as a supplement p. 5;  Changed by and obedient to his parents (p. 8, 15)  unable to be a romantic hero under the window; p. 12  success and disengagement; (15-16)  revelation  madness for love

8 William ’ s Romance  his final quest for romance  (in contrast to Harvey): Harvey 21 sees W as his meal ticket  W – the far-off look (21--22), lonely, changing the events in his talk 23  Harvey – aims at success 23; get W ‘ girls ’ 23  His final romance p. 25  Coralee – not really Jean, but seemingly rescued by W p.29  Wedding – the “ most touching one ” according to the minister  Harvey ’ s responses 29, 32  Jean ’ s appearance 31-32 – the one not mad, but completely destroyed

9 The Mother ’ s Intervention (1): The Unconscious Desire of the Mother? Why does she try to stop the youngsters from loving? (11) Precarious experience of “ romance ” as a heroic mother through the letter writing p. 11; Self-justification: Jean isn ’ t good enough (11) Checking the mails regularly to still have the experience vicariously Does not believe in suicide (or romance)

10 The Mother ’ s Intervention: class and gender inequality Her letters: breaking all the rules of romance: Class difference shown: Antagonizing the youngsters by having them talk about each other ’ s parents and accusing each other; (9, 14) the girl accusing W, with all the practical concerns of money and child birth; (14)

11 Conclusion Romance constructed with the help of class, cultural products such as opera; strengthened by the rituals as well as family objection and social constraints (e.g. the policeman); destroyed by families who represent class discrimination and strict morality reborn with illusion and a dumb girl. The woman shoulders the blame and consequences alone.

12 Next Time Lord of the Flies The Human Stain Paper or Online Interactions


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