Macabea Character Analysis

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Finally, she experiences destiny for the first time once the fortune teller tells her of her future lover awaiting her. For the first time, she finds passion and learns how to feel again. She now sees a future that she thought she would never have. However, Macabéa’s future suddenly disappears as her future lover, Hans, hits her by car. Macabea’s true destiny was her death as she gained more attention in that moment than she did in her whole entire life. Lispector displays her feelings through her voice and Macabéa’s process reflects in the male character, even though he has a wealthier status than Macabéa. He stands in the opposite social position of her, however, he still feels nonetheless, loneliness, and as invisible to others as her. “I …show more content…

However, she does not have as much power as a man and her voice is nonexistent. Ada is a mute woman who refuses to speak since the age of six and must use facial expressions, body language, sign-language, her daughter, or her piano to express herself. This action make her no longer silent unlike Macabéa. However, in the many similar traits to Macabéa, Ada fears emptiness and Ada maintains isolation like Macabéa. By willfully not learning to speak, Ada faces isolation with the threat of loss, abandonment, loneliness, and failed connections with others. Ada depends on her piano for her voice because her power is her passion and music is her strength. No one knows why she doesn’t speak, not even herself. What we are hearing, she tells us, is not her speaking voice, but the self-imprisoned voice that sounds inside her mind. The Piano is a feminist film because it gives us a version of female sexuality that is much more than a woman's "positive surrender" to men. It shows us the power of female passion to make music, touch souls, and have power in the bedroom. In short, it shows the power of women to be heard, and whole, in a man's

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