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Girl By Jamaica Kincaid

Decent Essays

Mothers nag us with chores and tell us to straighten up when we mess up, but mothers always know best and do everything out of love for their children. The short story “Girl” by Jamaica Kincaid demonstrates this in a list of instructions a mother gives to her daughter to help her live a successful life. Directions that are listed involve food, clothes, social skills, health, and protection of public image. Together these tasks assist in characterizing the mother and daughter. In “Girl,” Jamaica Kincaid employs characterization through the characters’ actions, conflict, and dialogue to reveal the mother’s tough love and the daughter’s immaturity. At first, Kincaid’s story seems to be an arbitrary list of actions a strict mother tells her daughter, …show more content…

The first time Kincaid shows this conflict is when the mother says “walk like a lady and not like the slut you are so bent on becoming” Secondly, when teaching her daughter how to dress, the mother shows how to hem a dress to “prevent yourself from looking like the slut I know you are so bent on becoming” (Kincaid #). Both times the mother refers to her daughter’s desire to become a slut, Kincaid exposes the daughter’s immaturity and misunderstanding of social norms. In the daughter’s youth, she does not understand how to dress and act in pubic, so the mother reprimands her by identifying the bad behavior and provides instruction for the proper way to act. Although the mother’s instructions are very clear, the daughter still becomes a slut. Later, the mother instructs “this is how to behave in the presence of men who don’t know you very well, and this way they won’t recognize immediately the slut I have warned you against becoming” revealing the daughter, at this point in the story, has become a slut (Kincaid #). The daughter’s direct defiance of her mother’s instructions shows her lack of respect and immaturity. Even though the daughter has gone against her mother, the mothers love for her daughter is still apparent by the help she continues to provide. Through the conflict between the mother and daughter, Kincaid portrays the daughter’s defiance and mother’s endless

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