The Theme Of Gender In Boys And Girls By Alice Munro

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As a newborn a gender is assigned, this gender being what you will be brought up as until you decide you want to bend the rules and change the roles, once more children realize they do not need to conform to the roles they develop a sense of love, confidence, and understanding for themselves and others. In Alice Munro’s “Boys and Girls” the theme of gender is an anchor that gives the story a deeper meaning and gives the reader insight on stereotyping and gender assignment among children. The genders are what develop the main character, her assumed gender or lack of show how she grows and acts throughout the story. Moreover, gender roles are very prominent and these stereotypes show the setting where the family lives. Lastly, the roles reveal …show more content…

The characters in this story, with the exception of the main character, all follow their gender norm and develop as usual, the main character’s views however, shift and mold to the situation she’s in. The narrator’s grandmother tells her that “’Girls [do not] slam doors […].’ ‘Girls keep their knees together when they sit down.’ And worse still, when [she asks] some questions ‘[That is] none of girls’ business’” (Munro 4-5). The main character still slams the doors and sits with her legs open “thinking that by such measures [she keeps herself] free” (Munro 5). By doing this she is moving away from what her grandmother does and taught her mother to do. She makes her own decision to keep doing what makes her comfortable instead of learning and developing her attitude to meet the female standards her grandmother set for her. Furthermore, the narrator is helping her father outside when a salesman comes into the pens, her father introduces her as her helper and the salesman replies, “’ [could have] fooled me.’ […] ‘I thought it was only a girl.’” (Munro 4). The narrator continues with her work, though she was met with a distraction she would not let it conform her to how a stereotypical girl would have to act. She still prefers and wants to continue learning and helping her dad outside on the farm rather than helping her mom in the house. In …show more content…

The family is the stereotypical farming and labour father who wants to enlist his son to take over while the mother is the homemaker and is looking for the help of her daughter inside the house. The narrator and her brother, Laird, are fighting when the narrator “[uses] all of [her] strength against him” when her brother catches her arm for a second her father “[laughs], saying ‘Oh, […] [Laird is] [going to] show you, one of these days!’ Laird [is] getting a lot bigger. But she [is] getting bigger too’ (Munro 4). The story is set at a time where women do not fight back against men and are expected to act with poise. Though the narrator is holding her own against her brother, her father still knows that one day he will be the one fighting and getting stronger. Additionally, it is believed that the man’s work is of more value and importance over the woman’s. Among the family it is known that “work in the house [is] endless, dreary, and peculiarly depressing; work done out of doors, and in [the] father’s service was ritualistically important”, the farm work and labour done outside is of more praise and honour than the housework and work of a female (Munro 3). This due to the fact that the male figures in the family are the breadwinners and leaders of the household at this time, the females work, though maybe not as tough as the male’s job was not as important

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