Monday, September 20, 2010

Why Did Jo Get Married? Realism and Fairytale in Alcott's Little Women

(Melville and I decided to switch days this week; she'll give us a fabulous post on Wednesday! --Shelley)

There are many things to love about Louisa May Alcott’s children’s novel Little Women: its endearing characters, who naturally make mistakes, indulging their selfishness and certain temptations, but who, more often than not, are remorseful for their wrongdoing, and strive to be better, to be “good”; its joys and gratitude in the simplicities of life, particularly family life, despite the burdens of poverty; constantly turning negative situations/attributes into positive ones: “Wealth is certainly a most desirable thing, but poverty has its sunny side, and one of the sweet uses of adversity, is the genuine satisfaction which comes from hearty work of head or hand; and to the inspiration of necessity, we owe half the wise, beautiful, and useful blessings of the world”; the blessings and payoffs that come as the result of personal determination and concentrated work (especially for the disadvantaged 19th century female); its depiction of respectful, powerful, intelligent, hardworking, and amiable women; and a genuine celebration of all things American, including its faults: “[Amy’s] old petulance now and then showed itself, her strong will still held its own, and her native frankness was unspoiled by foreign polish.”

These aspects of the novel, including many others, reflect the novel’s strength: its sense of realism. We can identify with the characters on many levels: they are flawed individuals who are constantly learning as they mature and gain more experience; they have hopes and dreams that involve careers and romance; they have a deep love and connection with family and friends; most importantly, they must constantly overcome roadblocks and struggles as they proceed through life, which sometimes means making a serious life-change. Such changes and adjustments make these characters complex, and as the world and its inhabitants are complex, the text exudes reality in many forms.

And yet, I am ultimately reminded that this is a children’s novel (especially the first half) because, with all of the realism, the text also greatly succeeds because of the nostalgia Alcott creates. She makes stitching and mending by the fireside, sharing and writing stories, putting on plays, befriending neighbors, housework and domestic life, raising children, teaching, and battling poverty sound pretty enjoyable, despite the difficulties inherent within such activities. It seems as if Alcott celebrates joys and hardships alike, creating a paradoxical fairytale-like aspect to the story while it is at the same time entrenched in realism. I mostly get this sense from the fact that every conflict eventually works itself out **SPOILER ALERT**: Mr. March recovers from pneumonia and makes it home from the war safely; Beth recovers from her scarlet fever, and even when she suffers an early death, she willingly accepts her hard fate with hope and grace; all the girls find happiness in a marriage of their choosing; Meg and Brooke’s early marital woes are pretty normal and are easily overcome (their marriage eventually thrives with the addition of vivacious twins); Laurie and Mr. Laurence’s relationship persists stronger than ever after several instances where Laurie’s “manliness” is threatened; Laurie graduates from college with honors after many distractions jeopardize his earning a diploma at all; Amy’s early selfishness and vanity blossom into social tact and grace (she is the traditional belle of the ball in all aspects); after Laurie’s devastating rejection from Jo, he and Amy are neatly paired together in a most romantic coupling; and the March family ultimately stays together despite three marriages because they all live close to each other, and regularly interact. Most importantly, Jo—the seeming outcast who identifies more as a boy than a girl, who has much trouble holding her tongue and controlling her temper, who basically feels unlucky and out of place—finds a suitable partner in the Professor (quenching her fear of loneliness), and even more, is able to live her dream of helping and schooling young lads. In the end, everything just seems to work itself out; it seems too perfect in spite of all the difficulties the March family faces.

So, how real is Little Women? After Amy and Laurie’s marriage and return from Europe, Bhaer magically appears to save Jo from the horrid loneliness and boredom she envisions for her future: “She opened it with hospitable haste, and started as if another ghost had come to surprise her,—for there stood a stout, bearded gentleman, beaming on her from the darkness like a midnight sun.” The professor is imagined as a “ghost” and a “midnight sun,” two very magical, abstract qualifications. And then Jo, who all her life swore off marriage, and with immense restraint repeatedly rejected her best friend’s marriage proposals, ends up becoming Bhaer’s wife, all the result of her own desires. Is Alcott’s decision to marry Jo off a reflection of reality—a reflection of the compromise many 19th century women made in order live less lonely and financially depraved lives, or maybe a reflection of Jo’s “tender, womanly half of” her nature that has finally blossomed in adulthood—or is Jo’s fate unrealistic and more mythical, compared to her independent actions and tendencies throughout the lengthy text? In other words, is her fate more magical because it’s a happily constructed Victorian ending for a female character who, throughout the whole of the text, would rather not be married? Can Jo—the persona of Alcott and the main protagonist of the story—still be considered the heroine of the text for contradicting herself, and being married in the end?

I find Jo’s situation at the end the most fascinating aspect of the text because it sparks so many questions about the purpose and meaning of the text, and subsequently provides many reasonable possibilities as answers. On one level, one could argue that Jo makes a powerful and artful decision to marry Bhaer: he will help her “bear” two boys in addition to serving as the instructor for her all-boys school, thereby allowing her to fulfill her dream to always live and be surrounded by young lads, whom Jo claims to more closely identify with. By marrying the Professor, then, Jo uses her husband as the means to her true happiness and career goal. And yet, I feel like Jo’s desire to be with Bhaer is more of an emotional one, as Alcott intends: “Was it all self-pity, loneliness, low spirits? Or was it the waking up of a sentiment which had bided its time as patiently as its inspirer? Who shall say.” The narrator purposefully puts doubt into the reader’s mind as to Jo’s desire for Bhaer’s partnership, but it’s clear that her desire is spun from emotion. For example, when the Professor does not show up for three days after spending two straight weeks with Jo, she “become[s] pensive, at first, and then,—alas for romance,—very cross.” Her reaction to Bhaer’s absence seems to be a romantic one, not a deceitfully constructed one. Jo’s emotions strongly reveal themselves again when she tears up after finding out that Bhaer will move across the country, and possibly crush her wish to be with him. Evidence from the text, then, more strongly suggests that Jo really loves Bhaer, and does not want to just use him for her own personal gain (business-wise).

Still, this ending seems too perfect for Jo, as it does for the rest of the family who care about her, making Little Women somewhat mythical. Is Alcott’s perspective just a positive one? Why did Jo have to be married? Her decision and desire to marry leaves me a bit unsettled because it seemingly contradicts her previous depiction as an independent woman dead-set on not being married. Obviously, people can change as they grow older, as Jo very well might have, but from a narrative standpoint, why does Alcott marry Jo off? Is it enough for Alcott that Jo does not give in to Laurie’s advances, and end up as Mrs. Laurence? After all, Bhaer is an unconventional match for a Victorian heroine, regardless of Jo’s unconventionality herself. Was upsetting Victorian’s readers’ desire for Jo and Laurie’s marriage enough to satisfy Alcott’s will to make Jo the independent heroine that she seems to be? I’m not sure, mostly because she seems to satisfy the rest of the story with Amy’s marriage to Laurie (pretty romantic in itself) and Jo’s ultimate marriage to Bhaer. So, I ask you this: why is Jo married off in the end? Is Alcott merely looking out for herself financially, trying to sell a successful novel that pleases the Victorian public’s appetite for a conclusion marked by three happy marriages? Or does she really think all sorts of women, even independent women like Jo, will find true happiness in marriage, if that marriage is decided freely by both man and woman? Or is she merely illustrating—realistically—that people are complicated beings who, through life experience, alter their attitude and beliefs toward certain subjects and ideas? Would Little Women be as successful and celebrated as it is if Jo stayed unmarried and possibly lonely for the rest of her life, even if she was independent? Is Alcott claiming that too much independence breeds loneliness and unhappiness, or maybe that one’s true happiness is through their relationship with others, especially with a spouse and children? What do you think? I would love to know!!


**Please note: our September book of the month is Ivan Doig's The Whistling Season, which we'll be discussing in a couple of weeks. Try and read it if you can! http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/02/books/review/02birkets.html

5 comments:

  1. i have no idea what alcott was trying to do! ha ha. but it seems from your thorough analysis that perhaps she valued the bittersweet complications of being a human during that time, specifically female - independence or a "settled" marriage? the combination in Jo is what is fascinating to me. maybe she was trying to say that there should be a balance - it shouldn't be so extreme, that humans are more complex and rich in emotion and life desire than to simply be alone or married to someone they don't want to be. sounds like it was reflecting a societal transition? maybe a transition in gender issues? i dunno.

    rad questions!!

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  2. So when I taught this book, this was obviously one of the longest discussion points. Just a side note to Alcott's life. She was the daughter of a very politically active family-- her dad hung out with Thoreau and Emerson and she was a stated feminist. She never got married in life and many critics speculate she may have been a lesbian. She stayed at home and took care of her parents as they aged. That said, she's also wanted to make money as a writer. When she started writing the novel she said that she did not want it to be a didactic novel or have an agenda (though I think the book is very moral), and part of me thinks she married Jo off to please her readership (and, as you mentioned, it is a very Victorian ending). I think another reading could be that she wanted to show that all types of women could find love. The four daughters are very different and they all succeed (in finding good husbands). Although the suggested death of Amy's (or is it Meg's?) daughter I think works to show that life is not to be perfect, but they will find ways to fight on.

    What bothered me the most about Jo's situation is not her marriage but the quieting that happens to her before the marriage, which is what makes the marriage possible in the first place. The first scene she's somewhat muted is when she is punished for the very fire that makes her a "feminist" character. She is banned from Europe with her aunt because she refuses to give into the fakeness and gossip that Amy indulges in because Amy sees it (or knows it is) her duty as woman. The second time is when Beth dies. Beth begs her to be more womanly and not to have so much fire. In some sense Beth's death is like a sacrifice for JO. It is a crucial turning point in her character. After her death, Jo is determined to be softer and more like Beth. It is these two scenes that I find troubling because she is obviously punished for her personality. She can no longer be "boyish" now that she is a woman. She must grow up and in doing so must give up that fire that makes her so great. With reluctance, it's as if Alcott knows that the boyish Jo cannot be happy in this century unless she changes because no one will accept her.

    Also, though I think Bhaer is a good fit, he is also very fatherly where Laurie was more her equal (or even more like her son). In the way that Jo makes Laurie a man, Bhaer makes her a woman. Giving her lessons as what she should and shouldn't write. I thought it could be interpreted that women need fatherly husbands...the same could be said between Mr. Brooke and Meg and even Mr. March and Mrs. March. All the men are teachers. Mrs. March has to be taught by her husband to control her temper too. Although Alcott does much to equalize the sexes and I think the whole point of the book is to show that a woman's place in the home is just as important as the man's in the world, she also seems to say that ultimately all women need men to show them how to be good little women. I could keep going, but I will stop for a breath.

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  3. @Megan: thanks for your comment! I think your suggestion is a solid one: people are complex beings; making black and white life decisions, or deciding that only one way is the way to live, isn't realistic. Jo is definitely a complex character; she's constantly fighting with her emotions, tough and blunt sometimes, but nurturing and caring other times. It seems she was confused or frustrated with herself because society (including members of her family) found her inappropriate, not very lady-like, and so, she was consequently trying to hone in on her more "feminine" nature (one which was vulnerable to romance and wifedom), at least towards the end.

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  4. @W.: Intriguing thoughts! I'm especially interested in your points about Jo's moments of quieting before her marriage because those scenes struck me, too. I definitely feel like Jo is punished for her "abominable tongue," while Amy is rewarded for her displays of respect and subservience. It's almost as if Alcott is emphasizing that women must be careful how they show their independence during this time. If they are too blunt and proud about it, conventional society (represented by the older aunts) will automatically reject such "masculine" behavior. Instead, in order for women to get what they want in a patriarchal society, they must play the game, which Amy does exceptionally well. Amy has always desired the finer things in life--a finer way of life--so she behaves accordingly; we cannot be sure of whether she genuinely believes in the value of her respectful behavior or not. So ultimately, Jo is being punished--shut down--for not playing the game correctly, though maybe this experience makes her realize that in order for her to get what she wants (because she has always wanted to go to Europe, and her tongue prohibited her from it) she must refine herself, even if it means changing herself, and being someone who she is not. This is why that thought popped into my head about her possibly using Bhaer as a means to an end: she never wanted to get married, but she does because it's a part of the game, and if played correctly, will allow her to live the life she's always wanted with a tolerable husband. But that's debatable. So, I guess Alcott may be saying she thinks it sad and ridiculous to play the game, but growing up (especially as a female) necessitates more careful behavior. As an author, I think Alcott paid special attention to playing the game: giving readers what they wanted so that she may make money for her family, especially since one of her novels (I think Mood) was basically punished or rejected by readers because they found the ending (in which the female protagonist ends up not marrying two of her suitors, and dies unmarried) to be too much for them to handle. I don't think she's a complete sell-out for writing in this way; she was just a smart woman who knew what she wanted. I think people stil act in such a way today: we must do things and act certain ways that go against our true selves in order to gain something we desire. However far we go, or however much we sacrifice of ourselves to gain this, is up to the individual and her conscience. So anyways, this quieting is disturbing, as you said, but maybe a powerful tool for Jo to successfully enter adulthood, however pathetic and disappointing that may sound.

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  5. I also was intrigued by Jo and Beth's relationship, and how Beth's death affects Jo's life afterwards. The introduction to the edition I read claimed something fascinating about Beth's death: that she must die in order to preserve her childhood, or something like, she does not want to become an adult because it requires so much change and discomfort, so she must die in order to avoid adulthood. I think this has some truth to it because we always see Beth with her dolls, with the kittens, with no lovers, or no plans for the future beyond the confines of the March household. This notion can be similarly applied to Jo: if she wants to stay herself--outspoken, tomboyish, unmarried, and self-interested--she must stay a child, and not grow into adulthood. In other words, she must die if she demands to act however she pleases, no matter how offensive or unconventional she might be in others' eyes, because behaving as such will be rejected by society as she grows older (as her plans for Europe were denied). I couldn't find where Beth begs Jo to be more womanly with less fire; the only instance I could find is when Beth asks Jo to stay at home and take care of her parents after she is gone, as she would have done if she hadn't died. Jo promises to do this--to give up her own dreams of travel and such--but after Beth dies, Jo admits that doing such--staying at home for the rest of her life--is impossible for her adventurous spirit. These feelings, I think, are sparked by the knowledge of Laurie and Amy's marriage, and her own longing for the Professor. So, anyway, getting back to Beth's death: I think this is, as you mentioned, a turning point for Jo because she realizes she must change if she wants to survive adulthood; she must forget her boyish tendencies and alter her personaility if she wants to survive in such an age.

    Very interesting points about the fatherly husbands. I, too, think the husbands are a good fit for all of the women, especially since it seems they all willingly choose their husbands (or accept their proposals) with their whole heart. That made me feel a bit better about Jo's situation with Bhaer, but yes, these marriages are definitely tinged with instructor-like husbands. Maybe it has something to do with Alcott's own teacher father? Hmmm. Interesting! Thanks for your input! I could keep going, too, but should probably stop :)

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