Tuesday, April 21, 2020
Janette Turner Hospital 4 Vivid Female Characters In Her Two Novels E
  Janette Turner Hospital: 4 Vivid Female Characters In Her Two Novels           With " beautifully executed images" , Janette  Turner Hospital creates four vivid female character in her  two novels. The four characters are Juliet and Yashoda in  The Ivory Swing and Elizabeth and Emily in The Tiger in the  Tiger Pit . Each of the above is invested by Turner Hospital  with a deep consciousness.       In the view of Janette Turner Hospital, women are  immensely uncertain. They are never sure of what they want.  However, when it comes to dealing with external conflicts,  they are very strong-willed. On the other hand, she also  indicates that maternal love is strong. Women have  passionate beliefs in the importance of the family. As the  stories follow, these feminine personalities are gradually  proved.       Before leaving for India, Juliet had a hard time  deciding whether to stay with her professor husband, David,  or move to Montreal to stay with her former lover Jeremy.  Uncertain as usual, all Juliet wants is to " maintain the  balancing act."  She could never summon up the courage to  face new circumstances. Her mind is never firm enough to  challenge the present state. So she makes her choice in the  order of morality. She stays with her husband and leaves for  India with him. It is more likely that the fate designated  Juliet's future. She is married to Dave on her own accord.  Therefore, she does what a good wife is supposed to do.        1. Reviewed in : Booklist v.79 p.994 Apr 1, 1983      2. " The Ivory Swing " p.18         In Kerala, where David is on sabbatical to study  primitive Indian culture, the couple encounters Yashoda," a  widow who does not accept the fate and rigid rules of her  culture."  Yashoda wants the right to wear jewellery, to  appear in public; most of all, she wants love. She does not  care about either inauspicious or disgrace. She even runs  the risk of being penalized to travel with Annie. For an  Indian woman such as Yashoda, it is considered quite  difficult adjusting to her society.       Among the four female characters, many similarities  are found between Juliet and Elizabeth. Like Juliet,  Elizabeth has to choose between her husband and lover. The  only difference is that the death of her lover has certainly  made her life easier. She no longer doubts anymore after  Jeremy's death. Her cross-roads becomes one way and ever  since then her life is as simple as an ordinary housewife.  Elizabeth still recalls her past, but she appreciates that  fact that fate decides her future for her. In this case she  avoids family and friendship broken. And she has something  to remembrance for a life time.       Elizabeth's youngest child, Emily, is the  mysterious woman of the four. In Montreal where she happens  to be pregnant and Sydney where she encounters her lover,  Dave. She thereafter moves to England. It is obvious that  Emily love Dave a lot; but she is a uncertain as can be. Her  leaving Dave without even saying good-bye represents her      3. Reviewed in : Booklist v.79 p.994 Apr,1983     doubts. She is afraid that once she has to face the  reality, her love for Dave, she would crush.         Juliet and Elizabeth both stay with their husbands  after all, yet they do not own what they really want. Dave  has noticed Juliet's " staring from the window of their house  like a woman behind bars"  , so has Emily mentions about her  about her mother's " standing at the French window like a  caged bird." Emily is aware of her uncertainty. Therefore,  she decides to leave Dave for England. In her opinion she  only wants to get away from complicated life to sort things  out; but instead of talking to Dave about it, she leaves  secretly. Her doing so has hurt Dave and sacrificed her  son's, Adam, happiness as well as her own.         It is easy to get this kind of impression that  Yashoda might be the exceptional certain woman because it  seems that she fights for her ideas; however, if she has the  courage to challenge realities, she should be brave enough to  face the results. On the contrary, Yashoda begs for rescue.  One can only say she acts as if she was a spoiled kid. The  four women all have something in common. The problem is they  are afraid to let out their feelings.          4. " The Ivory Swing " p.152      5. " The Tiger in the Tiger Pit " p.32           Although Janette Turner Hospital implies that women  are uncertain, she believes that when it comes to dealing  with external conflicts,    
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