A Rose for Emily
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In primitive cultures, the primary source of threat to human beings is Nature. But in economically-advanced countries, it is not nature, but other human beings who make us feel threatened most of the time. One might say that people are often de-humanized. To de-humanize is to remove or deny human qualities, characteristics, or attributes of a person or group of people. Using reader response criticism, a reader can analyze that in the short stories “A Rose for Emily” by William Faulkner, “Hills Like White Elephants” by Ernest Hemingway and “Miss Brill” by Katherine Mansfield one will find three examples of de-humanization taking place using the aspects of gender, social class and mental health as examples.
To begin with, dehumanization by gender is apparent in “A Rose for Emily”. Faulkners commentary on the role of women in society is clear; he believes that women are inferior to men, almost as second class citizens. For example, the story begins with Faulkner saying, “When Miss Emily Grierson died, our whole town went to her funeral: the men through a sort of respectful affection for a fallen monument, the women mostly out of curiosity to see the inside of her house” (115). Faulkner makes his beliefs about the role of gender clear by saying that men attended Miss Emilys funeral with honor and respect whereas women attend the funeral out of curiosity to see her house, which paints the women as less honorable than the men. In “Hills Like White Elephants”, Hemingway uses gender to dehumanize the girl in the story by giving her the name “Jig” as the Americans pet name for her. “Jig” being the name of a dance so that we see her as a form of entertainment for the American. The reader is never given her real name. Also in this same story the American tells the girl not to worry, insinuating that because hes a man he knows that everything will be alright. In “Miss Brill” gender is used to dehumanize when she talks about the two people that shared her “special” seat: “a fine old man and a big old woman…” (138). One might argue that both of these people are being dehumanized, he as “fine” because hes a man and she as “big and old” because she is a woman.
Faulkners commentary on social class is apparent in the story A Rose for Emily. “Alive, Miss Emily had been a tradition, a duty and a care; a sort of hereditary obligation upon the town…” (116). The community in this story holds Miss Emily as a sort of monument to the old south. She is expected to hold a certain place in society as her lineage dictates. Further, social class plays an important role in this same story, as Faulkners use of the character Tobe highlights the role of race in the setting of “A Rose for Emily”. Tobe is disrespected and dehumanized throughout the story. For example,