Monday, October 31, 2016

Major Namby: Britney Gomez, "Yes, Mother Sir"

Britney Gomez
Dr. Coronado
ENGL 328
30 Oct. 2016
Yes, Mother Sir
            Within the nineteenth-century, the stigmas regarding the roles of men and women were written throughout society. Men were to work and provide for the home while women were to stay home and take care of the children. Within Wilkie Collins short story Major Namby, Major Namby challenges the role of womanhood and fatherhood by being a leader in the forefront of his children’s lives. Major Namby shows concern for the health and wellbeing of his children and expresses these feelings openly. Through the actions of Major Namby, his concerns are expressed publicly alongside the love he displays to his children. Therefore, the repetition of concern expressed by Major Namby is a performative act which would classify his role as mother, according to Judith Butler’s theory on “Performative Acts and Gender Constitution.” The performative gender of Major Namby is determined by his actions towards his children. Since he repeatedly displays concern for the welfare of his children, Major Namby’s role signifies the nurturing role of a concern mother and how she would address concerns for her children; therefore, Major Namby displays the stereotypical role of a nineteenth-century mother.
            To better understand Judith Butler’s theory on “Performative Acts and Gender Constitution,” I must first give insight into her theory. Butler states, “but the more mundane reproduction of gendered identity takes place through the various ways in which bodies are acted in relationship to the deeply entrenched or sedimented expectations of gendered existence” (Butler 904). Within Butler’s argument, the idea arises that an individual is judged and scrutinized by the actions performed within society. It is with those performance an individual’s identity arises. Butler’s theory also points to the issue which “is simply that one way in which this system of compulsory heterosexuality is reproduced and concealed is through the cultivation of bodies into discrete sexes with ‘natural’ appearances and ‘natural’ heterosexual dispositions…The contention that sex, gender, and heterosexuality are historical products produced which have become conjoined and reified as natural” (905). In this statement, Butler suggests that while writing a character and their actions, most characters fall within the socially accepted stigmas associated with each gender.
Wilkie Collins’ character, Major Namby, performs roles which are considered “feminine roles” within the nineteenth-century. He displays “One of the most important functions of woman as comforter was her role as nurse…Many homes had ‘little sufferers,’ those pale children who wasted away to saintly deaths. And there were enough other illnesses of youth and age, major and minor, to give the nineteenth-century American woman nursing experience. The sickroom called for the exercise of her higher qualities of patience, mercy and gentleness...” (Welter 163). Although Major Nimby does not stay within the confines of his home, he does display the role of nurse while speaking with his wife, nurse, and nanny. As Major Namby leaves his home, the scene plays out as:
‘It’s a sou’east. I won’t have Georgina taken out today.’ (Georgina is one of the first Mrs. Namby’s family, and they are all weak in the chest.) ‘Where’s Nurse?’
‘Here, Sir.’
‘Nurse I won’t have Jack allowed to run. Whenever that boy perspires, he catches cold. Hang up him hoop. If he cries, take him into my dressing-room, and show him the birch rod. Matilda!’
‘Mind the crossings. Don’t let the children sit down if they are hot. Don’t let them speak to the other children. Don’t let them get playing with strange dogs. Don’t let them mess their things. And above all, don’t bring Master Jack back in a perspiration.’ (Collins 285-6)
Within this scene Major Namby is displaying the nineteenth-century role of a mother or nurse. He is informing the women in the home of the children’s illnesses and how to best take care of them. Typically this role is performed by the mother, nurse, or nanny; however, Major Namby takes control of the role by displaying concern for his children and how best to ensure their safety and wellbeing.
            Wilkie Collins consistently displays Major Namby as a having a feminine role. He does so by having Major Namby publicly display his love for his children through feminine roles. Another scene in which this takes place is when Major Namby is concerned for his young daughter. He states, “‘Nurse! which of the children was sick, last time, after eating onion sauce? … Ha, yes!’ we heard him growl to himself in a kind of shameless domestic soliloquy. ‘Yes, yes, yes – Sophy was sick, to be sure’” (289). Within this scene, Major Namby is displaying concern for his daughter by remembering that she is unable to eat a specific portion of a meal. With this he is able to inform the nurse, nanny, and mother that the child is not to have something, thus allowing the child to eat and not become sick. Within this display, Major Namby has repetitively displayed feminine roles in regards to his children wellbeing.
            Another feminine role which Major Namby displays is his love for his children. Within the nineteenth-century men were considered to be the “bread winner.” They left the home to work and make money which would support their family. The women stayed home with the children showing concern and love for them. According to Barbara Welter’s “A Cult of True Womanhood: 1820-1860,” “A true woman naturally loved her children; to suggest otherwise was monstrous” (171). Major Namby contradicts this by displaying love and affection to his son. Namby’s actions are public and display the love and affection he has for his child. He states:
“Ha! ha! ha-a-a-a! What calves the dog’s got! Pamby! Look at his calves! Aha! Bless his heart, his legs are the model of his father’s! The Namby build, Matilda! the Namby build, every inch of him. Kick again, Bill – kick out like made. I say, ma’am! I beg your pardon, ma’am…Look at him ma’am. If you’re a judge of children, look at him. There’s a two-year-older for you! Ha! ha! ha-a-a-a! Show the lady your legs, Bill – kick out for the lady, you dog, kick out!” (290).
Within this scene Major Namby is displaying the stereotypical feminine role by showing love and adoration for his children. Namby’s joy and love are displayed publicly and are a repetition of his daily life.
            Throughout Wilkie Collins’ short story, “Major Namby,” the stereotypical gender roles are skewed. The women play a very small role within the story while Major Namby displays many feminine roles including the role of caretaker or nurse. Namby displays multiple times when he shows concern for his children’s health, when he discovers the direction of the wind change, and how this will cause them to have chest pains. Another situation is when he is concerned for the health of his daughter, Sophy, and how she is unable to eat specific foods or she would become ill. Thus, within Butler’s theory on “Performative Acts and Gender Constitution,” Namby’s repetitive care for his children displays the nineteenth-century women and not the stereotypical Father figure. Therefore, Major Namby’s role is not the gender in which he was born but the performance in which he displays, Major Namby refutes the masculine role and is the feminine caretaker.






Works Cited
Butler, Judith. “Performative Acts and Gender Constitution.” Literary Theory: An Anthology, Edited by Julie Rivkin and Michael Ryan, Blackwell Publishing, 2004, pp. 900-11.
Collins, Wilkie. “Major Namby.” Short Stories: A Magazine of Select Fiction, vol. 10, no. 3, 1892, pp. 283-90.

Welter, Barbara. “The Cult of True Womanhood: 1820-1860.” American Quarterly, vol. 18, no. 2, 1966, pp. 151–74.

No comments:

Post a Comment