Preview

Property

Better Essays
Open Document
Open Document
946 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Property
Serena Crowder
October 13, 2010
AFAS 342-002 Yuxuf Abana
“It was a common enough tale; no one would think it a paradox.” From the very beginning, it is extraordinarily easy to step into the mind of the main character and narrator Manon Guadet and how the world she lives in becomes an eerie reality. Deeper throughout the novel, there are many themes presented through Manon’s eyes. Through the use of many paradoxes, the themes of racism, gender oppression and marriage in Property, by Valerie Martin is ultimately connected with the institution of slavery in America. The aristocratic life of the early 19th century is defined in the use of these themes through the pictures they create. Not only do the themes cause the novel to become so gripping, but the characters help in the suspense as well. Each character is presented to be believable and very developed, adding to the excellent sense of reality that the novel gives off overall. Property captivates its readers and enables them to place themselves within the character and makes it easy to relate to the character’s feelings and emotions. Valerie Martin’s Novel Property is an immersing and captivating story of Manon Gaudet, the wife of a slave owner and a slave, who is the mistress of the slave owner. The story takes place in the early 19th century deep within slavery, on a sugar plantation in Louisiana. While reading, the author, Valerie Martin steers you through the lives of both, Manon Guadet and her slave and servant Sarah. Both characters being incredibly unhappy with their lives for very different reasons, but the reasons end up becoming ultimately similar. Mrs. Gaudet unhappily lives married on a plantation to a man that she despises and cannot love. Sarah, the slave to Manon, unhappy due to the simple fact that she is a slave, and had been raped a multitude of times from her owner, which has ended up in Sarah conceiving two unwanted children by Mrs. Gaudet’s husband. The drama between



Cited: * "paradox." Dictionary.com Unabridged. Random House, Inc. 13 Oct. 2010. <Dictionary.com http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/paradox>. * Martin, Valerie. Property. New York:       Doubleday, a division of Random House Inc, 2003. Print.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    “troublesome property”. Stampp also describes how slave owners made the slaves stand in fear as the…

    • 545 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Women on the plantation, both black and white, were not merely left behind during the Civil War, but instead right at the center of victories and defeat. Beautiful pictures are created of southern belles and beaux with lavish entertainment, yet the strenuous work needed to maintain the extravagant estates is left out.…

    • 855 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Imagine that, after the events in the novel, Manon writes to an abolitionist in response to…

    • 565 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Plantation Mistress by Catherine Clinton is a historical non-fiction book which details the lives and the daily struggles of the white women of the planter class as it existed during the antebellum era in the southern United States. Through the use of historical records and diary entries of the women themselves, Ms. Clinton clearly documents that the lives of the Plantation Mistresses were remarkably different and significantly more difficult than what is that of Scarlett O’Hara and her family. Furthermore, the expectations of the white females of the time were not that of the pampered southern bell who was indulged and spoiled by her husband and whose every need was tended to by slaves. In fact, the women of the time were in only a…

    • 796 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    As a lonely woman facing the evil of her husband Sykes, Delia Jones can be viewed as the epitome of strength and strong- will. She works hard as a wash woman to support her family and household but is still referred to by her husband as “one aggravatin’ nigger woman” (par. 8). Jones is forced to deal with mental, physical, and verbal abuse all at the hands of her husband. Sykes greets her at the door with anger and chastisement. As an African American poor woman Delia Jones deals with the struggle of maintaining a household, constant abuse, and utter unhappiness with her life and marriage.…

    • 504 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Throughout Literature the role and position of women has been constantly one of debate and controversy. For centuries women have struggled to exert any power or individual identity through times of male dominance. The novel The Great Gatsby as well as the play A Streetcar Named Desire and lastly the poetry of Anne Sexton, were all written during the 20th Century in America. Throughout the 20th Century, attitudes towards women in the USA were changing, the war had given an opportunity for women to realize and prove that they could look after the household without men. This called for much debate about the rights and roles of women which carried on throughout the 20th Century and inspired many of the characters and themes within Literature. In all three texts interactions between men and women are explored and represented in different ways. Each painting pictures of women whose compliance and submissiveness have resulted in their portrayal of being male dominated victims of society’s double standards.…

    • 3734 Words
    • 15 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Bibliography: Howell, Donna Wyant I Was A Slave Book 1: Descriptions of Plantation Life Washington, DC: AMERICAN LEGACY Books, 1998…

    • 758 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Toni Morrison’s Beloved is a novel that follows the life of Sethe, an escaped slave; her mindset after slavery, and the stories of other people in her life. By using distinctive time frames, the text presents various difficulties that arise in Sweet Home, a plantation in which Sethe, Paul D, Paul A, Paul F, Sicko, Halle, and Baby Suggs are previously enslaved. The novel offers ways in which the characters deal with the repercussions of slavery. The ultimate question Toni Morrison poses to readers is: Are slaves truly free after slavery? More to the point, is physical freedom synonymous to being wholly free? Morrison consistently addresses freedom apart from the physical release from slavery. The author depicts a lack of complete freedom in…

    • 1801 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The women of southern plantations are something that not many write about. There is a critical lack of information and books about them, which makes writing about her a difficult task. Many southern women are mentioned in many books only as part of the males. “It was not until the early 1970’s, with the advent of the women’s movement, that a book written by a Southern woman about Southern women was recognized as being of scholarly significance…”…

    • 2803 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Tobacco Road Essay

    • 842 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Although Caldwell’s depiction of poor, white tenant farmers might be characterize as unkind and perhaps unfair, he does so in order to highlight the lack of opportunities for improvement, and the soul-stealing poverty, which were prevalent for sharecroppers during this time. While the lurid details in the book surrounding death, lust, sex, ignorance, backwardness and physical deformity could be considered sensational, Caldwell uses these shocking elements to alert the reader to the simple truth that the landless class of the Deep South suffered profoundly and in ways that other Americans could never have imagined.…

    • 842 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Another key factor described by both authors was family. In fact, family was very important for African-Americans. Bost stated that during the selling, women begged the speculators to be sold with their husbands. The idea to be separated from their family was a terrible misfortune. Bibb emphasized on the relationship he had with his wife and his child. He revealed how powerless he was while seeing his child whipped and his wife abused by their master. He declared “I could never look upon the dear child without being filled with sorrow and fearful apprehensions, of being separated by slaveholders, because she was a slave, regarded as property.” In addition to be detested by slaves, non-slaveholders did not appreciate their status vis-a-vis of slaveholders. Most of them got along with slaves since they were considered inferior to the slaveholders. In conclusion, these two narratives reveal the unhuman conditions faced by enslaved people their life. One can perceive that the role of family, religion and culture was primordial in their daily lives. Even though the difficulties they encountered, they never lost sight to be free one…

    • 419 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    She sheds light on the fact that slaves endure both the emotional pain of the loss and separation of their families and the physical pain of the abuse from their masters. In the beginning of the story, Stowe introduces a slave named Eliza (pg. 11). Eliza suffered the loss of two infant children (pg. 13), and she discovers that her master, Mr. Shelby, has agreed to sell her son to a trader named Haley (pg. 32). Eliza decides to escape with her son before he was to be taken and begins her exhausting journey to Canada (pg. 33). Eliza’s fear of losing her family represents the same fear that thousands of slaves face. Her story shows the audience that slaves are more than just property; they have feelings and care for their families just as much as free…

    • 1059 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The book began in a child’s point of view, perfectly told, of growing up in rural Mississippi in the 1940s. She described the landscape, the people, and her own emotions with perfect clarity. While showing racism from the perspective of a child, she included her parents’ divorce following the constant moving of her family due to the fact that her mother struggled to feed the family on her own.…

    • 2029 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Slave Community

    • 1169 Words
    • 5 Pages

    John. W. Blessingame, The Slave Community: The Plantation Life in The Antebellum South (Oxford University Press, Inc: 1972, 1979).…

    • 1169 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Literature has always been an outlet used by postcolonial societies and disadvantaged groups to address issues that were either frowned upon or disapproved of in the past. One such concern is that of slavery and how it was defined and accepted as a natural preordained act. The superiority of one group outweighed the other and left them in a position of lacking and belittlement. This is an ongoing physical, psychological and social constraint that all work together to keep one particular group in “their place” while creating a universal understanding that the other is intrinsically better. Kindred a novel by Octavia Butler, is one of the greatest works that gives voice to the position of reductionism that the African American community faced but from the removed position of a woman from our current time. This science fiction novel captures the heritage of Butler who has roots in a Grandmother who was a slave and a single parent mother who worked relentlessly as a maid to provide for her family’s needs. It is this rich legacy that gives birth to the interest and relevance of the issue her story tackles. This essay seeks to analyse how Octavia Butler’s Kindred uses characters such as Dana, Kevin and Rufus as tools to boldly speak to the issue of colonialism and slavery and how these acts affects identity and gender relations of both the enslaved and enslaver.…

    • 2238 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays