Preview

Lena St. Clair: Character Analysis

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
400 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Lena St. Clair: Character Analysis
Only after Ying-ying realizes that she has passed on her passivity and fatalism to her daughter Lena does she take any initiative to change. Seeing her daughter in an unhappy marriage, she urges her to take control. She tells Lena her story for the first time, hoping that she might learn from her mother’s own failure to take initiative and instead come to express her thoughts and feelings. Lena, too, was born in the year of the Tiger, and Ying-ying hopes that her daughter can live up to their common horoscope in a way that she herself failed to do. Moreover, in this belief in astrology Ying-ying finds a sort of positive counterpart to her earlier, debilitating superstitions and fatalism, for it is a belief not in the inevitability of external events but in the power of an internal quality.
Lena St. Clair

Lena St. Clair is caught in an unhappy marriage to Harold Livotny. Harold insists that the couple keep separate bank accounts and use a balance sheet to detail their monetary debts to one another. Although he believes that this policy will keep money out
…show more content…
She constantly hears the mother and daughter in the adjacent apartment yelling, fighting, and even throwing things. She is shocked by the difference between these noisy confrontations and her own relationship with her mother, which is marked by silences and avoidance of conflict. Yet, when she realizes that the shouting and weeping she hears through the wall in fact express a kind of deep love between mother and daughter, she realizes the importance of expressing one’s feelings, even at the cost of peace and harmony. Although the neighboring family lives a life of conflict and sometimes even chaos, they possess a certainty of their love for each other that Lena feels to be lacking in her own home. Reflecting back on this episode of her life, Lena begins to realize how she might apply the lesson she learned then to her married life with

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Lena Lingard intrigues me. She’s gentle even though she’s lived on the farm her entire life and she manages to make the littlest things exciting with her charisma. In ways, her adventurousness and excitement make her similar to Tony. However, they differ in that Ántonia possesses a quiet beauty and inner strength that contrasts with Lena’s liveliness. It’s strange-- I dream the same dream “a great many times, and it [is] always the same. I [am] in a harvest-field full of shocks, and I [am] lying against one of them. Lena Lingard [comes] across the stubble barefoot, in a short skirt, with a curved reaping-hook in her hand, and she [is] flushed like the dawn, with a kind of luminous rosiness all about her. She [sits] down beside me, [turns] to me with a soft sigh and said, ‘Now they are all gone, and I can kiss you as much as I like.’ I...wish I could have this flattering dream about Ántonia, but I never [do].” (109) I love Ántonia and her steady independence but I cannot see her in my dreams in…

    • 734 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Blue Against White

    • 605 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Lena does not want to be different anymore. She decides to go to the city and there she goes to school. Hoping for a new life and no more standing out, Lena easily gets disappointed. She learns that even if you move to a place with a higher population, you can still be alone. After coming to terms with herself and realizing that the city is not what she expected, Lena goes back to the reserve. She was happy to return to her roots. They are the one place you are always welcome to come back to. As she was coming home she was glad to see the dogs running freely in the reserve and the blue door that she despised all her life had now shown her a sign of home and safety.…

    • 605 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Even though she hates her father, she still loves him. She misunderstands her parents’ situation, being only fourteen, and holds a grudge against her mother for going back to her father and agreeing to move to Norway, “he whistles and she goes back like a well trained dog”.…

    • 464 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The play Raisin in the Sun is set in Chicago during the 1960s. This play focuses in on a lower-middle class family who has recently lost the man of the house. While the family overcomes how to spend the insurance money it becomes clear that the three main female characters have major differences due to the ways they were raised in their generations. The women often butt heads on different topics like what duties women have in the house and in society. Each generation changes slowly but eventually the differences in them are very clear because of the evolution of duties of women.…

    • 933 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The use of shifting perspectives throughout the film allows the barriers that exist between the two generations’ cultural values to be explored; while the mothers are deeply rooted in their Chinese heritage and the values, norms, expectations, etc. of that culture, their daughters have more westernized worldviews. However, although conflict does unfold due to the differences that exist between each mother/daughter pair, a strong bond is present in each relationship. This undeniable bond is seen through loving actions…

    • 539 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    While reading the novel, 'My Antonia', one can very quickly notice that author, Willa Cather has much admiration for the character, Antonia. Throughout 'My Antonia', readers can conclude that Antonia is a very optimistic and inteligent girl who grows into an independent young woman. Due to such characteristics, many people could very easily find themselves admiring Antonia.…

    • 610 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Lena leaves the reservation for schooling in the city. She finds that she feels outcaste and alone. Lena wants to fit in with the majority this probably is pressure that she is faced with often while she is amongst her peers. Lena is facing a common pressure that all students and youth feel unsure of ones self so she try’s to cover up her fears of being unsure of her self by trying to be like the majority. These Tremendous pressures all relate back to her insecurity of the blue door back home a sign of where and who she is.…

    • 572 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Walter Younger Family

    • 473 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Lena gives Walter the opportunity to use the money in any way he wanted as long as he put it all in the bank first. Walter felt blessed and loved when Lena hands him the money. He promises her he will do as she says, but he immediately turned behind her back and put all he had into a liquor store. The two men Walter worked with took his money and left him behind to feel sorry for himself. Lena felt disappointed when Walter told her what happened, but she forgave him for this betrayal.…

    • 473 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The story of Ellen Foster is a beautifully written novel that shows the true long-term affect of how abuse affects the child emotionally, spiritually and psychologically. The book Ellen Foster written by Kaye Gibbons is about a ten year old girl named Ellen Foster in how she deals with abuse from her intimidate family however, Grandmother, Aunts and cousin. At the same time, she battles with racial discrimination while trying to obtain an intimate friendship with another colored female. There are three antagonists; Ellen’s grandmother, Aunt Betsy and Aunt Nadine who clearly see Ellen’s suffering, however do not do anything to help Ellen out of her…

    • 1043 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Also she has dedicated her life and struggles to instill values in them. Even when things were difficult she wanted the family to stay together by encouraging them about family pride. For example, when the insurance money had arrived she had no idea about how she really wanted to use it on. At last, she came to the conclusion of buying a house for the family despite the fact that Ruth told her to spend it on herself. ‘‘You know what you do Miss Lena? You should take yourself a trip somewhere. To Europe or South America or some place.’’ Mama refused to do what Ruth suggested because she values her family and put them first.…

    • 509 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the autobiography ‘Chinese Cinderella’, Adeline Yen Mah shares the story of her childhood as an unwanted daughter. Throughout her story, she faces many challenges that she must overcome. These challenges test her; they are able to make her stronger, wiser, but also weaker. With the right coping strategies, the difficulties she encounters will make her stronger and wiser; however, without developing the right attributes, the hardships she opposes will make her weaker and more incapable. Adeline’s autobiography shows us that it is the challenges in life that make us stronger and wiser, but without the right coping strategies, they can also make us weaker.…

    • 783 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Aibileen Clark is a 53 year old African American who is from Jackson, Mississippi “who has been taking care a white babies” and “cooking and cleaning” (Stockett 1) for white families. Aibileen has been taking care of white families for all her life and she believes that she knows “how to get them babies to sleep, stop crying, and go in the toilet bowl before they mamas even get out a bed in the morning”(1). Aibileen’s son died when he was 24 years old. She says that it was like a “bitter seed” (3) was planted inside of her and she is not as accepting to white as she was before his death. After the incident she believes that her whole world went black. Throughout the novel that bitter seed in Aibileen slowly disappears as she learns to look…

    • 167 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Although Elizabeth Lavenza is not present for most of the novel, she is a very pivotal character. Elizabeth is a prime example of how women were viewed as minor characters in a man’s story for the time period in which the book was written. The novel Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley, includes many instances where women are inferior compared to men. The main example that the novel displays this is through the character, Elizabeth. She represents a woman who cannot seem to gain any power over her life, and once she gets that opportunity, a man takes it away.…

    • 897 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    ELIT essay TVFTW

    • 825 Words
    • 1 Page

    Through her narrated flashbacks at the start of the parable, it is shown how she evolved from…

    • 825 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Throughout both stores, the protagonists go through changes in their lives, judgements by society and the act of feeling worthless due to isolation. Together, Mrs. Wright and Olenka demonstrate changes in their lifestyle after marriage when what they love can no longer be in their possession. At the same time, both are judged by the members of their society without knowledge on the events in their lives. Isolation from neighbours and the community result in Mrs. Wright and Olenka growing the sense of insignificance to others. Isolation also creates psychological changes in the characters’ well-being. If they only have the opportunity to love one thing, they will never want it taken out of their hands and if it is they will be left with a scar. On the whole, over a long period of time, isolation creates negative effects on human beings and can create a whole different…

    • 1421 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays