The
Mediation of Critical Themes of Motherhood Studies in Storytelling:
the
Case of The Girl Who Drank the
Moon
La mediación de temas
cruciales de los estudios sobre la maternidad:
el caso de The Girl Who
Drank the Moon
Catalina Millan Scheiding |
Berklee College
of Music Valencia Campus - España |
Received: 15-03-2024
Accepted: 24-05-2024
Abstract
By contemplating
the emotional and intellectual link between the reader and the book, this
article considers how a contemporary text might respond
to current motherhood studies’ issues, and how these studies
are mediated to be considered
appropriate for an audience of young readers. A psychosocial research strategy is used,
through a feminist theoretical framework, to analyze how the
young adult novel The Girl Who Drank the
Moon incorporates key
ideas of motherhood studies
through characters’ agency and the storytelling arch. Motherhood is represented
as an institution, an individual identity and an emotional experience,
and the novel offers the young reader
a nuanced vision into an ongoing
discussion. The potential of storytelling to mediate social justice concerns to the young reader is
highlighted.
Keywords: feminist criticism, motherhood
studies, storytelling, fairy tales.
Resumen
Al contemplar el vínculo
emocional e intelectual entre el lector y el libro, este artículo considera
cómo los textos contemporáneos responden a las cuestiones de los estudios
actuales sobre la maternidad y cómo estos son mediados para ser considerados apropiados
para una audiencia de lectores juveniles. Se utiliza una estrategia de
investigación psicosocial, a través de un marco teórico feminista, para
analizar cómo la novela juvenil The Girl Who Drank
the Moon incorpora ideas clave de los estudios
sobre la maternidad a través de la agencia del personaje y el arco narrativo.
La maternidad se representa como una institución, una identidad individual y
una experiencia emocional, y la novela ofrece al lector juvenil una visión
matizada de una discusión en curso. Se destaca el potencial de la narración
para mediar en las preocupaciones de justicia social ante el lector
preadolescente.
Palabras clave: crítica
feminista, estudios de maternidad, narración de historias, cuentos de hadas.
1. Introduction
A female witch
lives in the woods and requires the sacrifice of a child every year
to keep peace with the citizens
of a town bordering the forest. A mother
goes crazy because she must
give her daughter away to the authorities for that year’s
sacrifice. While the initial premise
of The Girl Who Drank the
Moon sounds like a fairy tale based on tropes and stereotypes,
the novel offers mediated content on contemporary ideas of motherhood as represented through storytelling.
Since the dawn of Children and Young Adult’s literary studies, there has been an ongoing
discussion between the educational and the entertainment value of texts. In the last 40 years,
this discussion has been linked to the different aesthetical
preferences of each synchronic trend and connected intertextually with a literary sphere that has created its own
canon and presented its own deviations (Hunt, 1996, 2004; Nikolajeva,
1996). Throughout, Children
and YA literature has manifested
that it may
purposedly intend to offer a pedagogical message or eschew
this aim, but it is
always immersed in ideology and reflects moral concerns of the sociocultural moment of its creation
(Hollindale, 1988; Stephens, 1992). In parallel, literary criticism as a whole has also undergone numerous changes, especially during the 20th Century: from
a purely formal perspective
to interdisciplinary approaches,
connected to social movements.
This openness in literary criticism has offered the possibility
to include the reader and their experience, and question the structure of Literary Studies in the context of education, especially higher education (Butler, 2018).
While the connection or distinction between the ‘critic’
and the ‘reader’ can be discussed, Butler considers how “many people
choose to study literature because they feel a deep
intellectual and emotional commitment to the texts they have
read” (Butler, 2018: 12). It
is for this
reason that this analysis of The Girl Who Drank the
Moon is presented. As a
text inscribed in a unique synchronic moment, this examination
intends to illustrate the crossing points
between feminist studies, specifically motherhood studies, and The Girl Who Drank the
Moon, the 2017 Newbery Medal winner and a New York
Times bestseller text. The issues explored
are the following: how does a contemporary
juvenile text incorporate or respond to current motherhood studies’ issues? How are these issues transformed
into a storytelling which is considered
appropriate for a specific audience of middle and YA readers?
2. Methodology
As an interpretative practice, and considering Denzin and Lincoln’s (2011: 12) definition, the following analysis
intends to follow psychosocial feminist theory as a theoretical paradigm and perspective. The research strategy
will compare social theory with a literary example, and how subjectivities, relations, social
and institutional practices
are portrayed in the storytelling (Charles, 2022). The
methodology used is observation and recording of actions and agency of the literary
characters, and their effect in the storytelling
arch, following categories linked to motherhood studies. These categories are evaluated in relation to their link to psychosocial studies, namely the construction of the subjectivity of the characters through sociocultural and institutional
experiences (Charles, 2022: 1).
The feminist philosophical approach of this qualitative research is incorporated
into the research design, illustrating how it shapes the
research question and the researcher’s approach (Huff, 2009), and opening the examination
that this paper offers to contrasting philosophies or to different disciplines for discussion. This follows an
axiological assumption, as defined by Creswell
(2013: 20), since the research presents a clear position towards the analysis of values and power structure. Rooted in a movement that strives
towards equity and intersectionality, this analysis can be considered to represent a desire to “bring about change
or address social justice issues in our societies” (Ibid: 23), therefore converging with a transformative framework of research (Mertens, 2003).
As Keller (1985: 6) considers feminist theory as “a form of attention, a lens that brings into
focus particular questions”,
this study offers a way of reading The Girl Who Drank
the Moon that engages both intellectually
and emotionally with the elements, representation
and agency in the story as an example
of a text influenced by the contemporary
historical moment.
3. An
Introduction to The
Girl Who Drank the Moon
The Girl Who Drank
the Moon is a young adult
fantasy novel that presents a coming-of-age perspective which incorporates different generational points of view. First published in 2016, author Kelly Barnhill creates a choral adventure that reinterprets fairy tale tropes and presents a cross-generational female perspective on what it means
to be a hero/ine. Her characters are immersed in a context that displays a state authority power struggle (Haidi, 2020) and illustrates contemporary issues such as public discourse manipulation. In this environment, traditional female characteristics are reassessed: storytelling and the oral tradition, the construction of family structure, the definition of love. The protagonists have a unique connection
with nature and the environment, and the use of magic appears to represent the absences and longings related to the link between the female child
and her mother. Feminist theory and, more specifically, the theme of motherhood, appears throughout the story and is
linked with agency. Additionally, contemporary studies on cognitive development
of motherhood are incorporated
into the storytelling and will be pointed out.
The story starts to unfold through the perspective of a male character as a child (Antain), when he witnesses how a baby girl
is torn away
from her mother’s arms to be left as a sacrifice for the witch
who dwells in the forest surrounding
the town. The town, known
as the Protectorate, has followed this tradition
for the last
500 years – a tradition which is performed
by the Elders,
an institution of men who are the
ruling governmental body. Gherland is the principal Elder at the beginning the
story, and he is also Antain’s uncle.
The main religious order, the Sisters of the Star, is
controlled by women and has its own specialized army. The head Sister Ignatia dwells in the Tower. The Protectorate is surrounded by
a bog, a forest and an area with
intermittent volcanic activity. The only
safe path to reach The Protectorate
seems to be the main road.
The witch, however, is a caring and nurturing figure that picks up the children
abandoned by The Protectorate and takes them to be adopted to the towns at the other
side of the forest, the Free Cities. She lives
with a small dragon, Fyrian, and Glerk, a swamp monster. She becomes
attached to the baby girl who
has just been taken, Luna, and enmagicks
her by mistake,
by giving her moonlight to drink. As a baby, she is unable
to control her magic and the witch, Xan,
decides to put a spell on her to control her magic – leading
to the child being unable to be aware of the existence
of magic.
In the meantime,
the mother has been taken to the
Tower as she is unable to recover from the trauma of losing her child
and is called the Madwoman. Antain
resists the call to become part of the Elders
and decides to become a carpenter,
eventually marrying Ethyne, an independent
girl who has grown up with stories
about the history of The Protectorate. She also becomes the
first person in history to abandon the Sisters of the Star order.
They have a baby which is
marked to be the next sacrifice at the same time that
Luna’s magic will become unbound.
This triggers several actions that reveal who
the villain is (Sister Ignatia,
also a witch) and how magic can be generated from different sources.
4. Readership: Middle Graders and Young Adults
Studies on the impact
of reading YA novels in the Western classroom scenario during adolescence point towards an increase
in engagement and reading motivation (Ivey and Broaddus, 2001). Reading age-appropriate
novels also seems to have an
impact on empathy and world perspective, by generating tools for personal development and vision of self (Bean and Harper, 2016; Glasgow,
2001). Young adults seem to
prefer to read YA literature rather than canonical literature, as they offer characters
and protagonists created with the adolescent
reader in mind while also offering
varied perspectives and voices in storytelling (Cole,
2008).
While The Girl Who Drank
the Moon is catalogued
by its publisher
as an 8+ novel and received
the Entertainment
Weekly Best Middle Grade Book of 2016 Award, it is built following a polyphonic structure, and subtly disrupting the chronological order of the plot. Upon
its start, Chapter 3 takes place before Chapter 2. The use of changing perspectives in each chapter is considered
to increase the complexity in its reading comprehension, possibly requiring a competence more sophisticated than the target reader group can manage since it
“required systems of thought and modes of cognition such as abstract thought that are not yet
developed in concrete operational
8 to 12-year-olds” (Emerson, 2019: 34, 52).
5. Motherhood:
institution and individual
The main topic of this analysis
is to focus on the concepts
of Motherhood as an institution, as an individual identity and as an emotional experience. The subtopics explored
are violence against women who are mothers,
trauma and sorrow in relation
to motherhood and the connection of these ideas to the struggle for
power.
One of the key elements
of motherhood studies is the distinction
between the mother as an individual and the institution of motherhood (Rich, 2021; Hirsch, 1989). Motherhood studies also diverge from maternal feminism (the idea that women
as caregivers have a distinct function in society) and include conversations on Reproductive Justice (Morison, 2021). Nonetheless, the incorporation of several of the ideas of maternal feminism are still present in general culture and rhetoric
(O’Brien Hallstein, 2017).
5.1. Mother as a role
The institution
of motherhood considers the idea of ‘mother’ as a role, not a person. This
institutionalization affects
the way we
refer to the experience of mothering, the way we
share this experience, and how it is
recognized by society. Since this multifaceted experience affects the perception and judgement of motherhood, Rich (2021) considers that the institution
of motherhood is under the control of patriarchy. This ‘motherhood as institution’ implies violence towards women and motherhood in general (O’Reilly,
2019). The experience of motherhood, however, has additionally proven to be racialized and non-inclusive, and fails
to recognize BIPOC experiences
(Hayden, 2017; O’Brien Hallstein,
2017; Nash, 2021) or any other non-normative experience (Gumbs, 2016; Valiquette-Tessier, Gosselin,
Young and Thomassin, 2019).
In contrast with the idea of motherhood as an institution, Rich considers that women, above all,
should be considered as persons and, therefore, they should not
be used as an instrument. They should have a voice
in the community and their voice should
be participant in decision
and policy making (Rich 2021; Gumbs, 2016). This personal embodiment of motherhood raises several other concerns
and discussions. On the one hand,
women’s duality appears as a collision between the autonomous
self and the mother that has to ‘disappear’ as an individual to be
in charge of care (Bueskens, 2018). Bueskens considers the duality
of this identity negotiation and how it impacts gender
roles, the domestic sphere, and the action of mothering. She highlights how women as individuals
might become free, while they remain
immersed in traditional gender roles as mothers (Ibid). On the
other hand, this duality appears
as mothers represent the first image
of authority in the child’s world (Hirsch, 1989: 166) and, therefore,
generate an uncomfortable conversation about the struggle
between power and feminism. Gumbs (2016: 24) specifically speaks about letting go
of the ‘m’ in ‘mother’ and refusing to dominate or abuse offspring.
Additionally, motherhood has been sacralized by patriarchal
societies, creating an archetype which
reduces real women to failures
(Rich, 2021). This archetype represents a type of mothering that requires the
fulfillment of both the domestic and public spaces and which has received different names throughout history of motherhood studies (intensive mothering, new momism) (O’Brien Hallstein, 2017:
2). It is related to matrophobia, considered an inherent
element of feminism, especially the second wave (Ibid: 25-45), and mostly linked to a white awareness of motherhood. Matrophobia can be defined as “the fear of becoming one’s mother” (Rich, 2021: 235 italics original)
since the aspiration should be to become better. Additionally, Rich presents the issues
raised by Hirsch in relation to the “mother as a constraining rather than an enabling
force in the girl’s development” (Ibid: 169) by embodying
the idealized example of motherhood. New mothering trends complement this idea from diverse perspectives.
On the one
hand, they suggest reducing the concept of ‘motherhood’ to the experience lived by privileged
mothers that do not find their
mothering experience threatened. On the other hand,
incorporate a new term, the action of ‘mothering’, which is performed by
the enslaved and underprivileged women that have historically
had to nurture and care for children
that were not their own,
while they did not have
a choice towards their own motherhood.
This concept is considered as a place to “grow past the norms”
(Gumbs, 2016: 24) beyond the archetype of motherhood.
The Girl Who Drank the
Moon represents the idea of motherhood as an institution through the initial premise
of the story. Motherhood appears to be at the service of the greater good
of The Protectorate, with the sacrifice
of a child being an accepted violence
against women and mothers in the context of the wellbeing of the general population.
One of the female heroic figures found in the book,
Ethyne, mother of a baby to be sacrificed, aligns with the
archetypical model mother in The Girl Who Drank
the Moon. After the volcanic eruption
and the climatic confrontation between Luna and Sister Ignatia, Ethyne becomes a de facto influential agent in The Protectorate’s society, as “in the center of these changes stood
Ethyne – all reason and possibility, and a hot cup of tea, which a baby strapped to her chest” (Barnhill,
2017: 373). Ethyne is a key female figure in the story, who
is able to decipher information in traditional storytelling and who mobilizes the
general society when Sister Ignatia has left The Protectorate
to hunt down Antain and Luna. Ethyne, therefore, represents an idealization of motherhood and the how it is
made to become a “separate sphere” in society (Biss, 2021: xi). When Gherland visits
Ethyne to announce that her child
will be required for the annual
sacrifice, and accepts a
cup of herbs he has previously
criticized as a useless crop, her welcoming
home is described as:
“The baby was
strapped to her body with a pretty
cloth, which she had embroidered
herself, no doubt. Everything in the house was clever
and beautiful. Industrious,
creative, and canny. Gherland had seen
that combination before, and he did not like it.
She poured hot water into
two handmade cups stuffed with mint,
and sweetened it with honey from
her hive outside. Bees and flowers and even singing birds surrounded
the house. Gherland shifted uncomfortably. He took his cup of tea and thanked his hostess; through
he was certain that he would despise
it. He took a sip. The tea, he realized peevishly, was the most
delicious thing he had ever drunk.”
(Barnhill, 2017: 274).
However, this
concept of a ‘model mother’
is contested when Ethyne is
able to transform others, as well as herself, leveraging her status as a doomed mother in the eyes
of other members of The Protectorate. Her character is
presented as unique, as she does not
respect the structure of power imposed by The
Protectorate and she questions the seemingly
unquestionable order. The threat to her
experience of motherhood seems to let loose
a unique strength or, as Factora-Borchers (2016:
155) describes it, a “crazy
urge to clean up the world for my
son.”
The Madwoman is a contrasting example of the mother archetype. In this case, there are several elements that differ in the experience of motherhood and, therefore, affect the identity
of the woman. Most evidently, the Madwoman has lost her daughter,
as she was taken away for
the sacrifice, even though she
also resists the order of things,
as Ethyne does (Barnhill, 2017: 7). This character represents the emotional experience
of motherhood, which is also part
of the active decision of becoming a mother (Rich, 2021). Her sanity is lost
with the trauma inflicted upon her as a woman and as a mother, representing Mauclair’s (2019: 41) analysis of
‘self-denial’ attached to motherhood, and how it is generally
found in picture books and in children’s literature. However, this madness allows
her to connect differently with the world and, eventually, access magic. She represents
the entanglement with the body
that the experience of maternity implies (Hirsch, 1989: 166). In this way, The
Girl Who Drank the Moon aligns with the
very successful consideration of motherhood as an example of love
and self-sacrifice, which is especially idealized
as it creates a response to
capitalistic, market values, based on
self-profit (Hays, 1996), yet it contests
these same ideas through the agency
of the mothers, which bridge the concepts of motherhood as an institution and as an individual.
5.2. Familial relations
The Girl Who Drank the
Moon presents a love relationship between mother and child that is akin
to a mystical link. It does correspond to current scholarship on the effects
of motherhood on neuroplasticity, cognition and
general endocrine regulation
and empathy (Duarte-Guterman
et al., 2019, Plank et al., 2021). A special connection appears to exist between child and mother. Luna can feel her mother’s presence,
and this helps Luna recognize her (Barnhill, 2017: 344-345). Her mother, the Madwoman,
is also able
to recognize emotionally that Luna exists.
Alternatively, Barnhill proposes a story in which motherhood, or more accurately, familial ties, are considered a choice. If there is
a relationship of love, a family link can exist (Ibid: 352). Contemporary motherhood studies include different perspectives on this idea, by considering
adoption and queer/lesbian mothering, while questioning the dynamics of power and perception among birth mothers,
adoptive mothers, not-mothers (Latchford, 2012) and
the assumption of maternal desire and familial ties as represented in narrative (Greenway, 2016;
Millán-Scheiding, 2021). The
inclusion of racialized perspectives and the addressing of privilege have proven to be key elements in these discussions.
In The Girl Who Drank
the Moon, Xan has a budding love for
the sacrificial baby when she picks
her up. Once the baby has been enmagicked,
she comments: ““Luna,” she said. “Your
name will be Luna. And I will be your grandmother.
And we will be family”” (Barnhill, 2017: 27). Becoming family connotes a responsibility towards each other, in which nurturing and education are key. Luna recognizes this role in the figure of Xan when she considers
her “the woman who fed
her. The woman who taught
her to build and dream and create” (Ibid: 347).
Maternal love or the act
of ‘mothering’ is not presented as sacrifice and/or competition, but as a choice which entitles
responsibilities and consequences.
While Fyrian speaks about Luna’s
companion saying “I despise that crow.
Luna loves me best” (Ibid: 357), Glerk reminds him that
the dragon does not hate
anyone. Luna must learn that love
is not linked
to the threat of possession. When she lets the
Star Children, all of them adopted,
know about their belonging to two families, she
reminds them that love can only
increase as “My love isn’t divided”
[…] it is multiplied” (Ibid: 378).
While motherhood
studies highlight how “motherhood […] works as a “god term” on culture, shaping positive connotations, assumptions and ideals about women, family
and society” (O’Brien Hallstein,
2017: 2), Barnhill proposes
a construct of motherhood that subverts the
traditional roles of stepmothers
or stepchildren (Alcantud
Díaz, 2021), by integrating
diverse family structures into the storyline and highlighting the agency required to be a family. In this way, she deactivates
the common manifestation of a reduced status
of women through competition (Rich, 2021). Additionally, while most of the characters
of The Girl Who Drank the
Moon are female, Antain
does proactively intend to defend his child against
the inevitable destiny of becoming the annual
sacrifice (Chapter 24). Whether this role crosses over into
parenting could be discussed, as he seems to embody a male function
of protection through violence.
5.3. Trauma and sorrow
The Girl Who Drank the
Moon represents a unique form of violence against women occurring simultaneously to motherhood, by illustrating the children being taken away from
their mothers after birth. O’Reilly
(2019: 1247) considers how
“violence immediately prior
to, during, and immediately
following pregnancy illustrates that the physical and mental health effects of violence against women are uniquely experienced by women who are mothers”.
Gumbs (2016: 22) refers to an institutional and systematic violence upon BIPOC mothers, not only in relation
to their experience of mothering, but also upon their
choice, illustrating issues of power impacting on the
mere possibility of experiencing motherhood. The connection between violence and trauma, especially during motherhood, is considered to cause a specific experience of post-traumatic
stress disorder where
“trauma experienced by an individual is so severe that the
individual is unable to cognitively process the experience, they experience repeated and often uncontrollable psychological distress (O’Reilly, 2019: 1247).
Trauma and sorrow are key elements of the The Girl Who Drank
the Moon, since they are the magical
nourishment that the main villain
requires to thrive. This element is
contrasted with a redefinition of love and family that pivots
upon the central idea of motherhood as the need to keep your
offspring safe, not necessarily as a means to possession or heritage. In this way, it
aligns with the concept of nurturing the freedom of the child, as posed
by Jordan (2016). In The Protectorate, mothers that had
lost their babies drowned in sorrow, since they
presumed the children dead. Towards the end
of the book, these mothers are filled with hope when they can see
visions of their children alive, on the other
side of the forest (Barnhill, 2017: 312-314).
The story itself starts out
with this fight for safety, when the mother
of a doomed child, against all tradition,
refuses to give her up for the
sacrifice (Ibid: 7-8).
The presence
of trauma appears at an
individual level, through the transformation of Luna’s mother into
the Madwoman and her journey back to having an identity.
It also appears
at a collective level, considering how the continuous trauma inflicted upon the family structures
of the Protectorate keep the city
under a cloud of sorrow and limit the agency of the
general population, illustrating
issues of power involved in the experience of motherhood. In this way, Barnhill
displays how “in patriarchal societies, where resources and wealth are inherited through male lines,
a number of patterns emerge
that are considered to increase the likelihood
that violence against women is
normalized” (O’Reilly,
2019: 1245) by presenting the main governmental
structure as a male organization, situated in that ‘once upon a time’ setting where “linguistic clues help the reader
construct a fantasy image filled with
pictures of castles, magic objects, princes and princesses, and faraway lands” (Palmira Massi & Marcela Benvenuto,
2001: 165).
The idea of sorrow
and protection lays a
bridge between conceptions
of institutional motherhood
and motherhood as an
individual in The Girl
Who Drank the Moon, by representing concepts that are being discussed in both areas. Considering sorrow can appear as the type of pain
Rich calls “affliction”, which prevents the sufferer
from managing their time or coordinating
a response; or as the pain she calls
“suffering”, which that can be used to trigger action (Rich, 2021), there is a contrasting way of dealing with loss in the
story. Fyrian confronts the loss
of his mother right at the same
moment that Luna has cracked open the memory of Sister Ignatia. Fyrian is guided by
his family (Glerk and Xan) to look past anger and sorrow to confront the feeling of loss and give space
to mourning – and the growth that comes with it. Sister
Ignatia, however, succumbs to loss: “my mother and my
father and my sisters and my brothers. My village
and my friends. All gone. All
that was left was sorrow.
Sorrow and memory and memory and sorrow” (Barnhill, 2017: 365).
When speaking about giving birth
in particular, but also about motherhood in general, Rich considers that the relationship
between pain and love, at both the
general cultural level as well
as the linguistic level, is embedded
into the ideology of motherhood (2021). In
Barnhill’s novel, not only does this
love/pain relationship affect mothers, but also
children. The dragon, Fyrian, is affected by
the loss of his mother. He is unable to grow
and this impossibility is pinned on
the death of his mother when
Fyrian was a baby. Glerk considers
it might have been “because
you stayed too close to where
your mother died. Maybe you
couldn’t bear to grow” (Barnhill, 2017: 321). When the same
events that killed his mother
500 years prior are happening again
(a volcanic eruption), Fyrian goes through
a growth spurt, as his size as an
adult dragon will be needed to protect his current
family: Xan, Luna and Glerk and, concurrently, he is forced to face
his trauma. Luna also incorporates these ideas into the concept of love. Upon the
death of Xan, she ponders how
“there is no love without loss,
she thought. My mother knows this. Now
I know it too (Ibid: 383, italics original).
5.4. Storytelling and the oral tradition
Storytelling appears as
a woman’s activity throughout the book. There are several chapters which are one-sided dialogues of
a voice that illustrates the story which The
Protectorate has built its social structure upon. It is
revealed that this voice is
the voice of Ethyne’s mother in chapter 38. Ethyne’s mother is piecing
together stories heard from previous
female voices before her, echoing
knowledge passed down for generations.
The inclusion
of metanarrative is a
crucial element to decode the structures of power in the storyline.
Ethyne considers how “a story can tell the truth,
she knew, but a story can also lie. Stories can bend and twist and obfuscate. Controlling stories is power indeed.
And who would benefit most from
such a power?” (Ibid: 309).
Domestic storytelling
has mostly been anonymous, yet current scholarship considers how it
was preserved and crossed generations through the voice
of women (Medlicott, 2018).
In the case of The
Girl Who Drank the Moon, storytelling is linked with the
current status of post truth
(McIntyre, 2018) and the
idea of discourse manipulation,
in the service of power. While Haidi
(2020) views this as a conflict between Ideological State Apparatuses (ISA) and Repressive State Apparatuses (RSA), with Sister Ignatia
asserting “I started the stories in the Protectorate. I did. They all came from
me. There is no story that I did
not tell first” (Barnhill, 2017: 329, italics original), the Madwoman says she
is wrong.
The metanarrative
can also be considered as an example of how
stories, interwoven, can remind the collective
motherhood of the limits imposed by institutional motherhood (Adams, 2017). It also pays homage
to the idea of oral storytelling
in contrast with the canonical written story, subverting and offering divergent and necessary perspectives on concepts such
as mothering. This offers a framework to question the established
order that story starts with,
setting in motion the actions and struggles that engage in key themes
of motherhood studies.
The Madwoman also refers to stories when she
is able to clearly see the
role of Sister Ignatia in her downfall. She
mentions how “everyone knows that name. […] it was in a story.
About how the Witch ate a tiger’s heart. They all whisper
it. It’s wrong, of course. You don’t have
a tiger’s heart. You have no heart
at all” (Barnhill, 2017: 329).
5.5. Connection to natural cycles
Motherhood as a unique
link to natural cycles accompanies
humanity since its early belief
structures. Rich mentions a mother “whose power radiates
out from her maternal aspect to the fertilization of the whole earth,
the planting and harvesting of crops, the cycle of seasons,
the dialogue of humankind
and nature” (Rich, 2021:
33). While this concept is one supported
by a patriarchal perspective, The Girl Who Drank
the Moon represents it often. The
moon is the
main culprit of the enmagickment of the sacrificial baby, and her corresponding name of Luna, aligning with the archetype
of the Prepatriarchal religion virgin-mother-goddess linked to the worshiping
of the moon and its cycles, associated
generally with women (Rich, 2021).
Barnhill highlights the idea of cycles, as she mentions how
“everything you see is in the
process of making or unmaking or
dying or living. Everything is in a state of change.” (Ibid: 333, italics original). Dyer considers how the cycle
of life and death is embodied in the woman’s menstrual cycle (Dyer, 2020: 70). She uses the example
of the myth of Persephone and Demeter to link this conception of natural cycle, concretized in the woman’s body,
and to illustrate the mother-daughter bond (Ibid: 100,
105). This idea is picked up in the book with Xan’s
death being related to the rise of Luna’s magic, at age 13. Glerk comments on the fact
with: “Poor Xan. She did her
best to hold on to Luna’s childhood,
but there was no escaping it. That girl
is growing. And she won’t be a girl for much
longer” (Barnhill, 2017:
323). Her coming of age happens magically,
with her ability to create, her coming into
her own powers,
and physically, her ability to procreate, coming into menstruation
and a different connection with reality. Barnhill
extends this power to every character that is able to love
when Luna considers:
“[…] how many
feelings can one heart hold? She
looked at her grandmother. At her mother. At the man protecting his family. Infinite,
Luna thought. The way the universe
is infinite. It is light and dark and endless motion; it is
space and time, and space within space, and time within time. And she knew: there is no limit to what the heart
can carry.” (Barnhill,
2017: 364, italics original).
6. Conclusions
As an example
of feminist literary criticism, this article intends to illustrate the synchronicity of issues that are central to motherhood studies as they appear in storytelling, and consider how these
issues are mediated for a young readership,
specifically in Barnhill’s
novel The Girl Who Drank the
Moon. To this purpose, characters’ agency and the storytelling elements have been
examined in parallel to axioms of motherhood studies, to identify how these ideas were represented from a psychosocial perspective.
Tucker (1981: 19) highlights
how “children […] with their essentially
moral imagination, still demand big themes
in much of their literature: dealing, for example, with
heroism, personal salvation,
or good and evil” and these themes appear regularly
in fairy tales (Bettelheim,
1977). As a contemporary fairy
tale, The Girl Who Drank the
Moon proves to be inscribed
into a synchronic moment where feminism
and motherhood studies are reflected in storytelling. A mediated view on
the complex status of motherhood as an institution, as an individual identity and as an emotional experience offers the child
reader a nuanced vision into an
ongoing discussion.
The following
figure collects a list of the critical issues
from Motherhood studies represented in The Girl Who Drank the
Moon. Both the concepts from “motherhood as a role” and “motherhood
as an individual” appear to
impact the construction of subjectivity of the characters and affect the storytelling
in relation to the institutional experience and the sociocultural reality within the narrative.
Figure 1: Critical issues of motherhood studies, as represented in The Girl Who Drank
the Moon
Motherhood as a role |
|||||||
Maternal feminism |
Reproductive Justice |
Traditional gender roles familial relationships |
Sacralized motherhood archetype |
Systemic violence against women |
Mothering as a choice: adoption |
Motherhood and femininity as connected to
natural cycles |
Racialized, non-normative experiences |
Represented (and contested) by Ethyne |
Represented by Ethyne
and the Madwoman against the interest
of The Protectorate |
Represented and enforced by The Protectorate |
Represented by Ethyne |
Represented by The
Protectorate (upon pregnancy and birth) |
|||
Motherhood as an individual |
|
|
|||||
Duality in agency and independence between autonomous self (individual) and mother (traditional gender roles) |
Authority in mother/child relationship |
Mystical link between mother/child: physiological effects of motherhood |
Trauma related to motherhood |
||||
Represented by Ethyne:
appears to have both roles coexist Appears with the
Madwoman: representation
of self-denial Madwoman represents the entanglement with the body Madwoman and Xan represent relationship between love and self-sacrifice. |
Tangential representation through the relationships
between the Madwoman, Luna and Xan |
Represented by the
Madwoman and Luna |
Represented by the
Madwoman and the other mothers
of the Protectorate |
Represented by Xan
and Luna familial relationship Represented by Xan
and Glerk’s familial relationship |
Found throughout the story, explicitly
mentioned as a cyclical reality; linked to sexual maturity |
Not addressed at any level |
Source: Summary of key Motherhood Studies' topics as represented by characters' subjectivity,
sociocultural and institutional relations
in The Girl Who Drank the
Moon, own work.
Barnhill’s novel focuses
on motherhood studies’ topics in relation to power, as illustrated through governmental structures and the role of storytelling. Several archetypical topics contested by feminism and motherhood studies are also found in the
book, such as (1) the archetype of motherhood as the “source of angelic love and forgiveness in a world increasingly ruthless and impersonal […] the
symbol and residue of moral values
and tenderness in a world
of wars, brutal competition,
and contempt for human weakness” (Rich, 2021:52) and (2)
the link to femininity and
natural cycles.
The construction
of family, however, incorporates a broader perspective by deconstructing stereotypical family structures and giving the characters
the agency to create their own
version of family and love, following a trend that is
shyly appearing in children and young adult’s literature (Ramos &
Ferreira Boo, 2013). Barnhill
highlights the agency of diverse female characters and asks the reader
to question the position of
mothers and children in the story. An
intersectional perspective on motherhood and the sociocultural elements that surround it,
however, is mostly not included
in the story, which does not
reflect contemporary trends in racialized and minority motherhood experiences at any level.
Numerous additional
considerations can be taken
into account as limitations to this research. The synchronic
flow between scholarship, dissemination and creation indicates that some theoretical
concepts are in constant expansion and can change with new research. The awareness of specific topics by the author
is not quantified:
why are some perspectives from motherhood studies incorporated while others are not? How does this
reflect the general circulation and echoing of scholarship on the topic? In relation
to future research, there are several other key themes
in The Girl Who Drank the
Moon which are related
to its synchronic moment of publication and which could also
be examined, namely the mechanisms of sorrow, coping and hope (at a moment when cognitive
functions are being explored in depth); storytelling, rhetoric and manipulation or censorship (at a moment where post-truth is present in mass
media) and education or memory.
The impact of the novel, albeit being awarded a Newbery medal, could also be quantified.
Is the readership
affected by the title (which
includes the key word ‘girl’)
and main female protagonist? If the readership is restricted by
gender, to what extent does the
incorporation of feminist or motherhood studies
issues impact upon education or reader’s knowledge?
Lastly, as Hirsh (1989:
176) considers: “if
maternal voices are not to
be found in feminist theoretical writing, is it possible
to turn to feminist fiction for an
articulation of maternal subjectivity?
Do mothers write their own experience
as mothers?”.
This article
compares a field of study (motherhood studies) with a creative writing piece (The Girl Who Drank the
Moon) through the lens of feminist theory, to discover whether and how critical issues are represented in storytelling. Since stories have
the potential to create a strong emotional response, and impact upon identity and representation, their potential to bring social justice concerns to the young reader
is fundamental.
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