I really relate to this piece. The relationship between her
aunt and her is very similar to my aunt and I; we think alike and have similar
personalities. I think Allison is playing on the idea that every girl struggles
with at one point or another in her life. I love how she associates the south
as people who pretend that they owed a plantation and then there are those that
are considered as trash. This piece kind of goes along of what I was writing
about in my personal essay; family has a way of feeling connected to us whether
we like it or not. My favorite line is: “Solid, stolid, wide-hipped baby
machines.” I think even today’s society, we have this image of beauty and if
you are not as Allison puts it “…good hair, curled or straightened to fit the
fashion, had slender hips…” then you are considered ugly. This piece reminds me
of Elaine Scarry’s On Beauty and Being
Just, where it explains how beauty is something we want to replicate, remember
and reproduce with. So it begs the question of whether beauty is human nature
or our developed perception from advertising companies. In my opinion, I think
we are drawn by beautiful things, but when it comes to people, I think we
sometimes forget about inner beauty because we are so focused on outer beauty.
Allison again describes beauty from her girlfriend as “…that inner quality
often associated with great amounts of leisure time.” Which goes to show, that
inner beauty is more important to have because at the end of the day if a woman
cannot hold an intelligent and thoughtful conversation, then is she really
still beautiful?
I like that you brought another text into the discussion. I'd intended for you to compare a Short Takes essay to something written by a classmate, though.
ReplyDeleteSo, you're doing well to quote from the text, too, but I don't know why that stolid line is your favorite line. To paraphrase you, if a writer cannot tell me why a line is beautiful, is it really beautiful?
Ha!
Good work.
DW