Disability and Containment in Early American Literature

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The Inter-Related Concepts of Disability and Containment in Early American Literature When analyzing the many facets of the portrayal of disability in early American literature, the idea of containment presents itself as common and prominent thread throughout. Containment, whether by social or physical means, is regularly employed as a means of marginalizing and limiting oppressed members of society. Using the many literary examples we have explored in this course as quasi-case-studies for the containment of the disabled, it is possible to investigate the many forms which containment can take and the societal beliefs which propagated these actions. One of the most blatant examples of containment which we encountered in our studies is the …show more content…

As a result of eugenic beliefs perpetuated throughout society, “The mentally disabled [partner] constituted a threat to communal morality, as would any potential offspring who might inherit the parent’s ethical and physical deficiencies and thus impede genetic improvement,” (Arant 70). This concept of the disabled presenting a threat to the community which must be contained is not only evident in the aforementioned works, but other works as well and presents a key motivation (however despicable and unsound) for many of the imprisoning actions detailed in early American disability literature. The short story, “Lily Daw and the Three Ladies” captures where these concepts of moral intelligence and containment meet. The story alludes to the idea that the three, self-righteous women who see themselves as protectors of the disabled protagonist, Lily believe that they have a higher moral intelligence than her and as such have the right to control and govern her life. They see themselves as the righteous protectors of the community, thus when it is discovered that Lily may have been sexually promiscuous they take it upon themselves to contain her and prevent the threat of her sexual maturity from ruining the morality of the community. It is evident that they do not care how she is contained, only that her risk is removed when they vacillate in between sending her to an institution or marrying her off. They bribe her and ultimately use

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