Tuesday, October 1, 2019
Explore the Significance of Metafiction in Jeanette Winterson’s Story of the Twelve Dancing Princesses
Throughout Wintersonââ¬â¢s rendition of ââ¬Ëthe twelve dancing princessesââ¬â¢ ââ¬â adapted from the renowned story by the Grimm Brothers ââ¬âthe plotline is explicitly centred around an array of fictional images. Implicitly though, the metafiction and accretion used can be unveiled as symbolism that correlates with a larger meaning; the images associated with men are uncomfortable and even evil in comparison to the comforting images (including the mermaid) that represent womanhood. Therefore, in the two specific examples of the mermaid and the poison, the reader may accept fiction as an underlying detail that leads to a deeper truth or argument.In the exact example of the mermaid the reader learns that the senior princess has fallen in love with her (the mermaid) and that they ââ¬Ëlive in the wellââ¬â¢ together. The scene is evidently fictional; mermaids donââ¬â¢t exist, and if they did, then Jordon and the princess wouldnââ¬â¢t be able to stand in the w ell and converse with the mermaid due to biological impossibilities. Therefore the statement is immediately false, yet the reader may find themselves accepting it as truth in order to move on to the grittiness of the plotline, and discover the significance of the mermaid; her impact can be interpreted in various ways.Firstly, the mermaid could be seen as the product of rebellion against the conventional ritual of marriage to a husband. Rebellion seems a reasonable suggestion after studying the original story, which Wintersonââ¬â¢s tale is arguably a continuation of. The ââ¬Ëdoors that were shut and locked upââ¬â¢ each night exemplify the fatherââ¬â¢s masculine domination over the freedom of his daughters. Likewise, in the tale the Kingââ¬â¢s offspring would rather see the soldiers killed than have their freedom limited; that ââ¬Ëthey laughed heartilyââ¬â¢ at the sleeping soldier exhibits this.That the princess had to plunge in ââ¬Ëdeep watersââ¬â¢ in Winte rsonââ¬â¢s tale exemplifies how she was willing to face the unknown (traditionally in literature the ocean is feared e. g. In the Tempest Ferdinand cries ââ¬Ëhell is empty and all of the devils are hereââ¬â¢ before plummeting into the ocean) in order to search for entertainment aside from her husband. Secondly, the mermaid could represent the princessesââ¬â¢ craving for womanhood ââ¬â this links on from the rebellion against masculine dominance.The ââ¬Ëdeep watersââ¬â¢ as a meeting place, followed by the fact that the couple live in the well ââ¬â envisaging a womb like place due to its round and wet characteristics ââ¬â may bring to some readerââ¬â¢s minds an obvious yearning for womanly presence and dominance within the princess. It is noticeable that the existence of a mother is lacking in both renditions of the myth and so arguably the princess may be trying to reconnect with the womb of the Motherly figure that appears nonexistent in childhood. A cceptance of nonsense can be further seen on page 55 in a passage where content may be viewed as allegorical.There is also arguably a sense of intertextuality as it bares reflection to the synoptic bible passage of the demon possessed man (Mathew 8:28-34), which should consequently ring out clear symbolic meaning to the reader. The melodramatic line ââ¬ËOut of his (the husband) belly came a herd of cattle and a fleet of pigs ââ¬â¢ can be defined by the reader as an impossible scenario. Consequently the reader will seek the implicit meaning which holds a deeper content. In the Bible passage, the rearing of swine off the cliff enabled the demon possessed man to walk freed from his past torments.Therefore, the suggestion could be that the husband is better off dead, released from sin, than living alive as an overeater with evil within him ââ¬â gluttony being a biblical crime. This argument is supported when the door salesman says to the princess ââ¬Ëyou are right to kill h imââ¬â¢. The princessââ¬â¢s hate for her husbandââ¬â¢s obesity reflects the forced status of their marriage; nowhere in the passage does any form of love or appreciation ring clear, only a sense of endurance ââ¬â ââ¬Ëwe had been married a few yearsââ¬â¢ for example suggests that the princess thinks that this is a fair enough trail run before murdering him .He is presented as unlikeable through firstly the unpleasant verbs that the princess attaches to his actions ââ¬â ââ¬Ëgulpedââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëcrashingââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëswelledââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëcomplainedââ¬â¢ ââ¬â and secondly through the portrayal of him as the demon. Arguably, the princess finds control and order after the fictional explosion that kills her husband, as Winterson writes in the first person, ââ¬ËI rounded them (the herd) upââ¬â¢ ââ¬â stressing the herdââ¬â¢s obedience to her ââ¬â contrasting to their disorderly actions to the husband who ââ¬Ëhad always complained a bout his digestionââ¬â¢ while the herds had been inside of him.Following on from this, it is arguable that with the ending of her (the princessââ¬â¢s) marriage came her ability to ââ¬Ëlive accordingââ¬â¢ to her ââ¬Ëtastesââ¬â¢. Her true satisfaction is exemplified in the final sentence ââ¬ËI prefer farming to cooking,ââ¬â¢ which, again allegorically, is arguably stating that she prefers her single life ââ¬â where she farms the cattle- , to her married life ââ¬â where she cooks the cattle. Therefore, again in this passage, the reader may accept that the content is fanciful to the real world, but for the passage it is necessary as the images created have significant impact on the symbolic meaning that Winterson is creating.Is Winterson a feminist? This could certainly be argued given the evidence found in the passages. A strong conclusion to her work is that woman have more of a chance of ââ¬Ëliving happily ever afterââ¬â¢ by ââ¬Ëliving accordi ng to their own tastesââ¬â¢ than through forced marriage ââ¬â the latter being the favourable traditionally in fairytales. This is mainly because Wintersonââ¬â¢s argument represents a changing view of a womanââ¬â¢s place in a more modern society than that of Grimmââ¬â¢s.Although she retains the same time period as the original tale, the conclusion that woman can find freedom through outwitting their husbands is much different from literature that would have been produced in early decades ââ¬â (albeit freedom is temporarily found by the daughters in Grimmââ¬â¢s tale when they outwit their father, and the soldiers night after night). Therefore a reader may acknowledge the falsehood in Wintersonââ¬â¢s passages, and yet acknowledge it as true in search for the deeper truth underneath.
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