Preview

Maggie: a Girl of the Streets

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
568 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Maggie: a Girl of the Streets
Maggie: A Girl of the Streets by Stephen Crane is a short novel about a young girl and the people in her life. Despite its brevity, this book displays many significant themes that its author intertwines in the story plot. Such themes are determinism, hypocrisy, false morality, self-deception, and appearance verses reality.<br><br>Maggie's mother, Mrs. Johnson, is a symbol of hypocrisy in the story. She lost her husband, and had to raise her children by herself in poverty. She drinks to heal her pain so that she doesn't have to face reality. In her drunken state, she becomes intimidating and overwhelming, even to her children. She is insane and can be described as an animal, often gossiped about in the neighborhood. How can a woman who is an overweight, brutal, alcoholic be a role model for or critic of her children?<br><br>It is Mrs. Johnson's responsibility as a mother to care for her children in every way possible, and love them no matter what. However, she does not understand or live by this philosophy. She disowns her own daughter when Maggie becomes a prostitute, and throws her out of the house. It is evident that Maggie is only trying to survive in any way possible after her boyfriend, Pete, leaves her heartbroken and discouraged. She is exposed to this awful and forbidden lifestyle after being abandoned by Pete, her lover, who is constantly surrounded by prostitutes while working as a bartender in the "classy" bars. Because Maggie doesn't know any better, she thinks of Pete as her "knight" who has swept her off her feet. He is only a charmer who is fake and shallow, but Maggie fails to see his faults. The reader can tell from the beginning of the novel that Pete will disrespect and mistreat her. <br><br>Mrs. Johnson never gives Maggie the support that she needed, and neither does her brother, Jimmie. With an alcoholic mother, who can be referred to as a savage, and a violent brother; Maggie attempts to escape from the constant chaos in her home. Mrs. Johnson

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    The reason this conversation remains is because it is not possible to prove any thing scientifically. As Maggie Cutler wrote in The Nation ‘One of the reasons so many media violence studies have been done is that the phenomenon may be too complex to study conclusively. There’s no way, after all, to lock two clones in a black box, feed them different TV, movie and video-game diets and open the box years later to determine that, yes, it was definitely those Bruce Lee epics that turned clone A into Jesse Ventura, while clone B’s exposure to the movie Babe produced a Pee Wee Herman.” (Cutler) This quote explains the difficultly of proving this relationship, because we can not measure against a clean sample. This means that there are no…

    • 148 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    When leaving Maggie’s mother’s mobile home, Maggie turns around and say, “I’m a fighter mama.” There are many reasons as to why Maggie would've said that to her mom for numerous reasons. The first reason, would be that Maggie’s father had passed away, leaving Maggie with her mother and sister, but unfortunately they didn’t care much about her making her feel alone and abandoned. . Maggie basically had to fend for herself and she tried to get by on her own since her family couldn’t care less. Secondly, since Maggie’s family didn’t care much she had to find odd jobs to help support her through her daily life, like becoming a waiter at an old diner. Within that Maggie struggle day in and out with eating and house expenses. Lastly, even though Maggie felt alone, she kept on pushing and exceeding to the very end of her life. In conclusion, Maggie said those words because all her life was a struggle to survive and become the very best fighter there was.…

    • 562 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the novella Maggie: A Girl of the Streets, the author Stephen Crane portrays hypocrisy throughout the story. The protagonist in the book is a young woman, Maggie Johnson, who has many responsibilities and is forced to make many difficult decisions. The story takes place in an urban city in the slums of New York, the Bowery. During the 1890s many people lived with hardships financially, emotionally and economically. Crane is a naturalist author; therefore, he uses this book to show the lifestyle of a common person during this time period by showing hypocrisy through different characters. He shows both sides of hypocrisy, the hypocrite and the person affected by the hypocrite. Crane is able to portray moral hypocrisy in the character Jimmie Johnson, and how his actions affect other people.…

    • 722 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The pieces I have chosen to focus on are “Maggie: A Girl of the Streets” and Clockwork Angel. “Maggie: A Girl of the Streets” was written by Stephen Crane and published in 1893 under the pseudonym, Johnston Smith. Later, when Crane obtained success through The Red Badge of Courage, he was able to publish a revised version of the story under his own name in 1896 (sparks). With “Maggie”, Crane attempted to show American life in New York as he had experienced it personally. The piece tells the story of Maggie Johnson who falls for her brother’s friend. When she is abandoned by him at the urging of a more experienced woman, she tries to return home only to be cast out onto the street. She dies sometime later wandering the streets as a prostitute. It is a story that shows how Maggie's home life set her up to not only fall for the wrong guy, but fall into a life of prostitution that would ultimately lead to her death. She was a kind and gentle girl without the skills to survive in the world she was born into.…

    • 1038 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Despite the fact that I, Maggie McCormick, am not the most talented musician out of my fellow sopranos, I believe that I should be permitted to attend the choral festival because it would help me to grow as a musician, it would be a great opportunity for me to develop greater bonds with my fellow attendees, and it would be a fantastic learning experience to hear the way each choir from the southeast sounds.…

    • 358 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Maggie is a very religious person and Kenan portrays this trait of hers right off the bat. For example, in the beginning of the story Maggie Williams is at church bright and early Sunday morning like she is every time. The only difference in this one particular Sunday is the fact that her son came to visit her with a plus one. Maggie was first thrown off by the fact that the person he brought to church was a white man, but she was completely appalled when she found out his friend, Gabriel, had not been to church in around ten years. She feels like Gabriel is now the reason that Edward does not go to church as frequently as he should and the reason that he has barely come home to visit her. Maggie at this point is not Gabriel’s biggest fan at the moment but soon that will all…

    • 900 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Everyday Use Analysis

    • 392 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Maggie is the very shy and polite one out of her and Dee. Maggie was the character that lived with mama, during the story it says that Maggie was burned in a house fire. This character is a character that would just blend into the background because of how shy she was, she wouldn’t talk to much; so she would rather just blend in with the surroundings. Maggie was a foil character because her and mama didn't change nothing throughout the six years that passed, while Dee did change a lot; throughout those six years. Maggie is a good hearted kid, she would rather let Dee have the quilts that were promised to her, instead of fighting over them.…

    • 392 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the short story, “The Last Day,” author Maggie Wipf conveys the theme of doing the right thing, even if it is hard to do. In the story, the main character, Eric, gets promoted to a higher-ranking job. He gets to solve top secret cases. However, things start to get weird when he and his team solve a murder mystery. He finds clues along the way that eventually lead him to the answer. As things heat up, family becomes to get involved and Eric worries about what will happen. In the end, Eric finds the real truth hiding behind this case and if pressured to make a hard decision. After doing the right thing, his whole life…

    • 118 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The story ends with the question “What the hell happened to Maggie?” Maggie, the mute kitchen girl at the orphanage where the two girls where raised, is a reoccurring issue that continues to haunt their adult lives. The woman who foreshadowed all of the problems in Twyla’s life, the woman whose bowed body and strange hat were the long-time vessel of Twyla and Roberta’s arguments, became what Twyla was both afraid of and mourning about. The issue of what happened to Maggie seems to be both literal and figurative, and though non-conclusive, is somehow vital to the story. At certain points, it seems that both Roberta and Twyla use Maggie to defend their own views regarding race. Twyla, regardless if she is black or white, maintains that she was innocent and that the older girls where to blame. Perhaps the older girls are a metaphor for society. This might be a metaphor of how one thinks that they are not to blame, that the rest of society is the one to blame. It was Maggie’s disability that caused such a resonance in the minds of these little girls; and which caused her persecution to begin with. This woman’s life and death were the opening and closing of Twyla’s eyes to the world of disability beyond race and even beyond body, it just took three decades for her to realize…

    • 742 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mama describes herself by saying, “In real life I am a large, big-boned woman with rough, man-working hands.” She is a hard working woman taking care of both her daughters. She was not well educated. Mama explains her educational background saying, “I never had an education myself. After second grade the school was closed down. Don’t ask me why: in 1927 colored asked fewer questions than they do now.” Mama did not have the privilege to an education like Dee because of racial differences in the past. She also knows the true meaning of her heritage and would not allow Dee to take the quilts. Mama understands that her heritage is not dead and is forever living and asks her daughter, “What would you do with them?” Mama knew that Dee would treat the quilts as if it was something to preserve. Mama describes Maggie’s shyness and lack of confidence by stating, “Have you ever seen a lame animal, perhaps a dog run over by some careless person rich enough to own a car, sidle up to someone who is ignorant enough to be kind to him? That is the way my Maggie walks. She has been like this, chin on chest, eyes on ground, feet in shuffle, ever since the fire that burned the other house to the ground.” The house fire has impacted Maggie’s life tremendously compared to her sister Dee. She is kind- hearted and is usually over looked as described…

    • 1150 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Maggie Girl of the Street

    • 1658 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Maggie grew up in a family with drunk and abusive parents. She has an older brother, Jimmie who is aggressive and likes to get into fights on street corners. Maggie also has a younger brother, Tommie, who passed away as an infant. Crane describes their mother, Mary, as a “large, rampant woman,” with immerse hands and yellow face, acting in a “chieftain-like” style (Crane 225). Her addiction to alcohol caused her to become violent and abusive particularly to her children and more specifically, Maggie. For example, when Maggie broke a plate by mistake, her mother was so furious her eyes “glittered with sudden hatred. The…

    • 1658 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The audience preoccupies itself in determining race, when in reality it proves only to mask the importance of this underlying sisterhood that cannot exist without its fellow feminine bloodlines. A powerful example of racial ambiguity, the character Maggie, which the two main characters saw as their mothers and never do agree on her racial identity, represents this idea of race as unfixed as the memory of her begins to fade in both of their minds. As well, Maggie served as the embodiment of the powerlessness of the girls, and so when the “gar girls” were abusing her, neither Twyla nor Roberta tried to help her, rather they viewed the weakness within themselves being attacked though her abuse. Maggie’s defenselessness outlined the struggles of being a woman, especially having a severe handicap, and being abused by other women was a strange form of “natural selection,” if you will, that sought to attack woman…

    • 728 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Hobsons Choice

    • 1165 Words
    • 5 Pages

    When the curtain comes up, you see Hobson's daughters on the stage in the shop. Maggie, who is hard working that she will succeed by perusing her wishes rather than her fathers. The audience would perhaps find this situation strange as women during the 19th century were not thought of as business women. As a result of this, tension rises as Maggie is defying the stereotype regarding women. She defies the fact that most women don't make something of themselves. By looking at the account books, it portrays her personality as forceful, forthright and a business type woman. As Maggie examines the account book, it displays that she is intellectual as she understand maths and she straight seems to be more noticeable from her other sisters as soon as she enters the scene. She automatically seems to look superior to them.…

    • 1165 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    “Maggie: A Girl of the Streets,” is a novella written by Stephen Crane and published in the year 1893. This work was published during the time of the Industrial Revolution, when factories were appearing everywhere. Their workers were often not paid enough to lead a decent life, and suffered from their situation. They were not very civilized and sometimes aggressive in their behavior. Perhaps because of this radical change from a more agricultural lifestyle to one of industry and factories, some pieces of literature were starting to transition from the classification of Realistic writings to works that are now categorized as works of Naturalism. While the two categories are related, Naturalistic works often are based in urban landscapes and focus upon the poor and less educated; whereas the character focus and settings of Realistic works were ordinary people living in both cities and small towns. Crane’s novella was written right as the literary movement of Realism ended and Naturalism began, and understandably includes elements of both movements. Crane’s story, though, can be concretely set in one category. His story occurs in urban New York. The plot of it is set on a community of its poor residents who cannot change their situation. The themes and tenets used in this work, as well as the aforementioned setting and plot choices, concretely set this novella in the classification of a work of Naturalism.…

    • 1636 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Naturalism made his introduction in American literature in the nineteenth century. In 1878, Henry James published a story, Daisy Miller, that made his reputation. A romantic tale of a beautiful American girl and her adventures in Europe. Oppose to Maggie: A Girl of the Streets (1893) by Stephen Crane was about the story of Maggie and her family, who lived in the Bowery district in New York, which is a rough neighborhood.Both authors were a famous in their own style. They both had a different style of writing and social issues that they represented in those two books. In Daisy Miller, Henry James was more about American versus European society, wherein Maggie Crane was emphasizing on the harsh live people were living in.…

    • 1522 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays