home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: alt.fan.tolkien
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!agate!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!mcs.kent.edu!mcs.kent.edu!mcconnel
- From: mcconnel@mcs.kent.edu (Mike McConnell)
- Subject: Re: Eowyn
- Message-ID: <1992Dec21.171726.28948@mcs.kent.edu>
- Sender: news@mcs.kent.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: mcs.kent.edu
- Organization: Kent State University
- References: <1992Dec16.233814@IASTATE.EDU> <1992Dec17.180854.29767@genie.slhs.udel.edu> <1gqt80INNn0e@gap.caltech.edu> <1992Dec20.000104.24370@cs.ucla.edu> <1h2b84INN9qn@mailgzrz.TU-Berlin.DE>
- Date: Mon, 21 Dec 1992 17:17:26 GMT
- Lines: 36
-
- In article <1h2b84INN9qn@mailgzrz.TU-Berlin.DE>, winkler@zrzsp12 (Barbara Maren
- Winkler) writes:
- > Is the ME world, as it is, "good", and Eowyn just "bad" ("isolationist")
- > as she does not accept her role? Tolkien, with the course of the
- > narrative, suggests it. I don't agree (still). I think her change of
- > mind is a compliance with certain gender assumptions Tolkien had in mind,
- > and it isn't even psychologically convincing. I heretically fear Eowyn
- > might have made a very bad housewife.
-
- Where does Tolkien suggest that Eowyn would--or even should--make a good house-
- wife. She is going to be Lord Faramir's wife, but that in no way says that she
- is going to be a twentieth century housewife (this is how I'm assuming you're
- using the term). She is going to help Faramir in his goal of restoring Ithilian
- to it's former beauty. I take it from this that she is going to have many respon-
- sibilities that go beyond home making, if we can look at Galardrial as any sort of
- example of a strong but nurturing woman.
-
- > The way woman/home
- > is portrayed, as well as the fact that they somehow, unquestionably, belong
- > together, has its roots mostly in the late 18th and 19th century, and less in the
- > (many) earlier forms of the sexual division of labor.
-
- If this concept of the domestic woman is so closely tied to the modern era, how
- well can it be applied to a story based in a Medieval era, written by an author
- who was consciously placing it in that Medieval time. Wouldn't it then be more
- appropriate to look at Medieval portrayals of women and see how Eowyn fits into
- that cannon. How does she rank with, for example, Waeltheow in Beowulf or
- Brynhylde.
-
- Pardon me if I misinterpret, but you seem to be saying "I certainly wouldn't want
- to be a standard, middle class, suburban housewife, so I can't see how Eowyn could
- marry Faramir this way. I just don't see how the two compare.
-
- Mike McConnell
- Dept of Mathematics
- Kent State University
-