Sunteți pe pagina 1din 7

To Da-duh in Memoriam Introduction Paule Marshalls To Da-duh, in Memoriam, first published in 1967 and reissued in Reena, and Other

Stories in 1983, is a story imbued with thematic resonance. The story focuses on a rivalry between grandmother and granddaughter; this conflict is based on several opposing forces, particularly the rural world versus the urban world, tradition versus modernity, and age versus youth. Marshall skillfully draws these disparate elements together, thus illustrating the cycles of time and the enduring nature of family. These multifaceted themes, along with Marshalls subtle evocation of Barbadian history and her rich symbolism and metaphor, have made To Da-duh, in Memoriam one of the authors most interesting and discussed works of short fiction. The story also introduces Da-duh, who appears in different forms throughout Marshalls work. Marshall openly notes the autobiographical nature of the piece, which she wrote many years after a childhood visit to her grandmother in Barbados. Understanding Da-duhs influence on Marshall is an important tool for achieving critical understanding of the authors body of work and her continuing themes. As Marshall describes her grandmother in an introduction to the story published in her 1983, Shes an ancestor figure, symbolic for me of the long line of black women and men . . . who made my being possible, and whose spirit I believe continues to animate my life and work. To Da-duh in Memoriam Summary To Da-duh, in Memoriam is an autobiographical story told from the point of view of an adult looking back on a childhood memory. The story opens as the nine-year-old narrator, along with her mother and sister, disembarks from a boat that has brought them to Bridgetown, Barbados. It is 1937, and the family has come to visit from their home in Brooklyn, leaving behind the father, who believed it was a waste of money to take the trip. The narrators mother first left Barbados fifteen years ago, and the narrator has never met her grandmother, Da-duh. Although an old woman, the narrators grandmother is lively and sharp. When she meets her grandchildren, Da-duh examines them. She calls the narrators older sister lucky, but she silently looks at the narrator, calling the child fierce. She takes the narrator by the hand and leads the family outside where the rest of the relatives are waiting. The family gets in the truck that takes them through Bridgetown and back to Da-duhs home in St. Thomas. The next day, Da-duh takes the narrator out to show her the land covered with fruit orchards and sugar cane. Da-duh asks the narrator if there is anything as nice in Brooklyn, and the narrator says no. Da-duh says that she has heard that there are no trees in New York, but then asks the narrator to describe snow To Da-duh in Memoriam | Author Biography Marshall was born on April 9, 1929, in Brooklyn, New York, the child of Barbadian immigrants who were among the first wave of Caribbean islanders to relocate to the United States. Her early life was suffused with Caribbean culture; she spoke its language

and followed many of its traditions. Marshall made her first visit to the Caribbean when she was nine years old, which inspired her to write poetry. After graduating from high school in 1949, she attended Brooklyn College (now part of the City University of New York). She graduated with a bachelor of arts degree in English... To Da-duh in Memoriam | Characters Da-duh Da-duh is the narrators eighty-year-old grandmother. She has lived her whole life on Barbados and is confident and proud of her lifestyle, surroundings, and ways of looking at the world. She dislikes the trappings of the modern world, such as any form of machinery, and is uncomfortable in the city of Bridgetown. When Da-duh first meets the narrator, the narrator imagines that she saw something in me which for some reason she found disturbing. However, Da-duh also feels connected to her granddaughter, as evidenced when she clasps her hand Nothing endures but change (Heraclitus 540-480BC). People are born, only to die again. In a neverending cycle of life and death, new ideas replace older ones and an evolution of perspectives takes place. Paulle Marshall aptly portrays this cyclical nature through her last line she died and I lived referring to her grandmother. The death is not physical alone. It is the death of old ideologies, dated traditions and disparate acceptance of modernization. In a vivid recollection of her grandmother DaDuhs reluctance to accept change during Paulles childhood visit, she narrates how the old lady loathes urbanity and finds delectation in her little island of natural beauty. The interactions that the narrator has with her grandmother remind us of the passage of time between generations. The demise of Da-Duh signifies the change that is inevitable, the transition from the old to the new. Symbolism Paulle Marshalls work is replete with a richness of literary devices like symbolism, imagery and metaphors. Describing the foreboding character of death, the narrator feels that the planes that bring death to the little village are swooping and screamingmonstrous birds. The sugarcanes that grow in the village are Da-Duhs delight and also the reason for the exploitation in the village. The pride of Da-Duh, the sugarcanes appear threatening to the narrator she feels that the canes are clashing like swords above my cowering head. This is a description of the duality of life. Where there is joy, there is pain and when there is life, death is bound to follow. Imagery The life-death antithesis is depicted in the closing lines of the book where the narrator paints seas of sugar-cane and huge swirling Van Gogh suns and palm trees [in] a tropical landscape . . .while the thunderous tread of the machines downstairs jarred the floor beneath my easel. Light is identified by the surrounding darkness and life, by death that eventually follows. The transient nature of life is evidenced by the changes that happen over a period of time. Deaths morbidity invades the colorful mind. The narrator imbues the readers mind with images that allude to this dark reality. All these trees.Well, theyd be bare. No leaves, no fruit, nothing. Theyd be covered in snow. You see your canes. Theyd be buried under tons of snow. Metaphor With a judicious use of metaphors, the narrator has drawn us to the reality of inevitable changes that our lives are subject to. Again, the sugarcanes are metaphorically perceived as the ominous danger that ...would close in on us and run us through with their stiletto blades. Later, the planes that cause the death of her grandmother are visualized by the narrator as the hardback beetles which hurled themselves with suicidal force against the walls of the house at night. She points at our dogmatism in accepting the fact

that the world is constantly changing. Those who fail to see this at first, experience it the hard way later. Conclusion However prejudiced we might be, towards change, the hard-hitting reality of a life-death cycle is inevitable. Time stands testimony to this fact. Paulle Marshall has illustrated this through the depiction of conflicting ideas between her and Da-Duh and she conveys this message at the start when she writes, both knew, at a level beyond words, that I had come into the world not only to love her and to continue her line but to take her very life in order that I might live. To Dah-Duh in Memoriam - Literature Notes SUMMARY This short story is about a young girl's visit, from New York, to the island of Barbados. The protagonist, along with her sister and mother, visit Dah-Duh. The visit is an interesting one in which Dah-Duh and the protagonist develop a caring, yet competitive, relationship. Dah-Duh introduces her to the riches of Barbados (nature), while the protagonist introduces her grandmother to the steel and concrete world of New York (industrialism). There is a competitive edge to their conversations because they each try to outdo each other on the merits of their separate homes. Dah-Duh, however, is dealt a blow when she learns of the existence of the Empire State building, which was many stories taller than the highest thing she had ever laid her eyes on Bissex Hill. She lost a little bit of her spark that day and was not given a chance to rebound because the protagonist left for New York shortly after. The story progresses with the death of Dah-Duh during the famous 37 strike. She had refused to leave her home and was later found dead, on a Berbice chair, by her window. The protagonist spent a brief period in penance, living as an artist and painting landscapes that were reminiscent of Barbados. SETTING The story is set in Barbados, in the 1930's.

CHARACTERS Dah-Duh: A small and purposeful old woman. Had a painfully erect figure. Over eighty (80) years old. She moved quickly at all times. She had a very unattractive face, which was stark and fleshless as a death mask (Marshall, p.178). Her eyes were alive with life. Competitive spirit. Had a special relationship with the protagonist.

Protagonist:

A thin little girl. Nine (9) years old. A strong personality. Competitive in nature. Had a special relationship with Dah-Duh.

THEMES Race: This theme is apparent when Dah-Duh and the protagonist discuss the fact that she beat up a white girl in her class. Dah-Duh is quiet shocked at this and exclaims that the world has changed so much that she cannot recognize it. This highlights their contrasting experiences of race. Dah-Duhs experience of race relations is viewing the white massa as superior, as well as viewing all things white as best. This is corroborated at the beginning of the story when it was revealed that Dah-Duh liked her grandchildren to be white, and in fact had grandchildren from the illegitimate children of white estate managers. Therefore, a white person was some-one to be respected, while for the protagonist, white people were an integral part of her world, and she viewed herself as their equal. Love and family relationship: This story highlights the strong familial ties that exists among people of the Caribbean, both in the islands and abroad (diaspora). The fact that the persona and her family left New York to visit the matriarch of the family, in Barbados, highlights this tie. The respect accorded to Dah-Duh by the mother also shows her place, or status, in the family. The protagonist states that in the presence of Dah-Duh, her formidable mother became a child again. Gender Issues: This is a minor theme in this short story. It is highlighted when it is mentioned that Dah-Duh liked her grandchildren to be boys. This is ironic because the qualities that are stereotypically found in boys assertive, strong willed, competitive - are found in her grand daughter. An example of this is the manner in which the protagonist / narrator was able to win the staring match when she first met Dah-Duh, this proved her dominance and strength. SYMBOL Empire State Building

This building represents power and progress. It is in the midst of the cold glass and steel of New York city and, therefore, deforms Dah-Duhs symbol of power; Bissex Hill. It is not by accident that the knowledge of this building shakes Dah-Duhs confidence. Steel and iron, the symbol of progress, is what shakes the nature loving Dah-Duh. It can, therefore, be said that her response to the knowledge of the existence of the Empire State Building defeat is a foreshadowing of her death. This is the case because it is metal, in the form of the planes, that rattled her trees and flatten*ed+ the young canes in her field. (Marshall. p.186). This is a physical echo of her emotional response to the knowledge of the existence of the Empire State building. The fact that she is found dead after this incident is not a surprise to the reader.

Do you think that either Da-duh or the child won their "battle of wills" in "To Da-duh, in Memoriam"? There is a sense in which both the narrator and her grandmother are losers in their "battle of wills," although overtly the child is the winner in this competition. When she tells her grandmother that there are taller buildings than the tallest tree on her island, the narrator feels she has won, but that this victory has come at rather a great price: Finally, with a vague gesture that even in the midst of her defeat still tied to dismiss me and my world, she turned and started back through the gully, walking slowly, her steps groping and uncertain, as if she were no longer sure of the way, while I followed triumphant yet strangely saddened behind. The way in which the granddaughter is strangely saddened indicates the cost of this victory, and the way that we could debate whether it was actually a victory at all. Note how the story ends and the final paragraph that points towards the way in which the granddaughter actually loses in a very significant way as well: She died and I lived, but always, to this day even, within the shadow of her death. The narrator feels the need to go through a period of penance when she becomes an adult, which reinforces the impression that although she did "win" the battle of wills, it was a victory that she came to intensely regret, and a victory that she realises was paradoxically a defeat. In "To Da-duh, in Memoriam," describe one moment in the story when the relationship between the granddaughter and grandmother changes. I think throughout this excellent story that narrates the battle that occurs between Da-duh and her granddaughter, the most important moment and the climax of the story comes when Da-duh shows the narrator the highest object on the island in a last-ditch effort to try and prove that her world is superior to the New York that the narrator tells her about. As she shows the tree to the narrator that "appeared to be touching the blue dome of sky," and asks her if she has anything this tall in New York, note the narrator's response: I almost wished, seeing her face, that I could have said no. "Yes," I said. "We've got buidlings hundreds of times this tall in New York." It is after this, of course, that Da-duh begins to ail and die, as "all the fight went out of her at that." It is after this that she leads the way, and the narrator follows "triumphant yet strangely saddened" behind, as she counts the cost of the bitter victory that she has now won. In "To Da-duh in Memoriam," what is the narrator's reaction on her first encounter with her grandmother? We are presented with an incredibly vivid description of the narrator's grandmother when she first meets her. The narrator tells us how she is overwhelmed by the sights and sounds of Barbados, never having left the States before, and so it is only when she is alerted to her grandmother's approach by her mother's tightening hand that she looks up and sees a "small, purposeful, painfully erect figure of the old woman." The description that follows gives us a real insight into the grandmother's character:

Her face was drowned in the shadow of an ugly rolled-brim brown hat, but the details of her slight body and of the struggle taking place within it were clear enough--an intense, unrelenting struggle between her back which was beginning to bend ever so slightly under the weight of her eighty-odd years and the rest of her which sought to deny those years and hold that back straight, keep it in line. We can see how the intense determination of her grandmother is expressed in her constant conflict to keep her back straight when gravity is pushing it towards the ground. She is certainly an incredibly strong and resilient individual who will not give in easily, which thus sets the stage for the conflict that will occur in the rest of the story between the narrator and her grandmother. To Da-duh, in Memoriam Have you ever read a poem that has complicated symbolism and descriptions? These things make this short story a great story. Paule Marshall, the author, uses an interesting point of view, tone or dialect, and symbolism to create a feeling of competition between the two main characters in the story To Daduh, in Memoriam. The story is told by the nine-year-old version of the narrator. As a little girl, she doesnt see or think much about everything. When she sees Da-duh, her grandmother, for the first time, she sees a small, purposeful, painfully erect figure and a face that is as stark and fleshless as a death mask. As the story goes along, the reader starts to understand the competition between the narrator and her grandmother from the point of view and the eyes of the narrator. As it is mentioned in the last paragraph, Da-duh and her granddaughter experience a competition in the story. The competition is about whose home is better, Da-duhs home in Barbados Island or the narrators home in New York. Each argument starts from a simple thing, like I know you dont have anything like these in New York. They both have strong will and heart; those feelings are shown in the dialogues they have during the narrators visit to Barbados from New York. This story has a lot of adjectives and symbolism to form the readers picture of the people and the places. For example, when Da-duh starts to hear about New York from her granddaughter, the author writes, I came to know the signs of her surrender: the total stillness that would come over her little hard dry form, the probing gaze that like a surgeons knife sought to cut through my skull to get at the images there, to see if I were lying; above all, her fear, a fear nameless and profound, the same one I had felt beating in the palm of her hand that day in the lorry. This is a pretty long and complicated sentence, but its filled with adjectives so that the reader can have a better feeling to the story. In To Da-duh story, the author uses a childs point of view in explaining the tone and the mood in the story. The tone in every dialogue in the story shows a competition and love of each persons home. In the end, an irony is shown when the narrator gets a house in a loft above a noisy factory with machines sounds that her grandmother was pretty afraid about. Within this irony, Paule Marshall ends the story with a sad and love feeling between the narrator and Da-duh.

S-ar putea să vă placă și