Sunday, March 24, 2019
Comparing Sexuality in Greys Riders of the Purple Sage and Doctorows
Sexuality of the Frontiers fair sex in Greys Riders of the Purple Sage and Doctorows incur to profound generationThe presentation of femininity in Doctorows Welcome to Hard Times is a strong departure from the heroine of Zane Greys Riders of the Purple Sage. Through the metaphor of the flatulence as the embodi handst of masculinity, both authors closely examine the complexities of the sexualized relationship of a frontierswoman to the men of her gild. Doctorow mirrors the tensions present in Greys novel though molly acts as an extraordinarily different vision of what the West required of a woman than Jane Withersteen. Both novels reach a sexual climax as the heroine engages the men of her society in a violent action of blood and birth.though it is a more desolate and harsh portrayal of a womans station, Doctorow places Molly in a similar situation as the victim of her society to the more traditional Riders of the Purple Sage. While Jane Withersteen is certainly not subject ed to military unit in the same way that the Bad Man from Bodie raped, beat and around killed Molly, Jane is still victimized by her community. Doctorows portrayal of the conflict is abstracted in ways that Greys is not. In choosing to call Turner The Bad Man from Bodie for the volume of the novel, Doctorow makes him more an abstract notion of violence rather than the more human race figure of jealousy Mormon Elder, Tull. However, in spite of the abstractness in Doctorows characterization, Jane is presented as an outsider in her community and is offered up as a give up to the peace, much in the same way that Blue exhorts Molly to reenter Averys saloon. From this communal point of victimization, however, Doctorow departs from the gender conventions es... ... Pass. The falling rubble acts as the hymen restored, preserving Jane and Lassiter and Fay inner(a) the womb, inside Eden. Thus, both novels examine the highly sexual tensions between the predominate female figures a nd the idea of masculinity as encapsulated by the gun, or more abstractly a weapon. Doctorow, though the tensions parallel Greys, counters the older work on nearly every point, finally culminating in a recognition of the abhorrence that frontier society creates. Much like the action of his novel, Grey retreats into a more idyllic vision of the West. However, he does admit the complexity of the gendered roles in the Western, though not to the extent that Doctorow casts the action in an Oedipal drama.Works CitedDoctorow, E. L. Welcome to Hard Times. New York Penguin, 1998.Grey, Zane. Riders of the Purple Sage. New York Penguin, 1990.
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