Tuesday, March 31, 2020
Great Expectations - The Character Of Mrs Joe Essays -
  Great Expectations - The Character Of Mrs Joe      Great Expectations - Mrs. Joe  The importance of Mrs. Joe in Great Expectations has two major   parts: the significance of the character, and the symbolism of the   character. The signifance of Mrs. Joe is to complete the figure of Joe   The symbolism of Mrs. Joe is actually the physical manifestation of   Joe's fears in combination with his desire for a commanding   father-figure. First, Mrs. Joe's reign of terror is obviously   necessary for Joe's existence. In the beginning of Great Expectations,   Joe requires identification as a major character. Without the weakness   that Mrs. Joe instills in Joe via her reign of terror, Joe never   develops to a major character. Joe is identified as a compassionate,   sensitive character, and the most direct way to display this feature   is to have the character appear vulnerable. Mrs. Joe serves as the   tyrant for which Joe is made helpless. Joe, unless he is a scared   character, does not recognize the friend he has in Pip. Without Joe as   a major role in Pip's life, Pip also seems very incomplete. Second,   Mrs. Joe also serves as the comical interlude of an otherwise sombre   story.  When she had exhausted a torrent of such inquiries, she threw a   candlestick at Joe, burst into a loud sobbing, got out the dustpan --   which was always a very bad sign -- put on her coarse apron, and began   cleaning up to a terrible extent. Not satisfied with a dry cleaning,   she took to a pail and scrubbing-brush, and cleaned us out of house   and home,... Truly, a frightening creature is that that may destroy a   household by cleaning when anger besets her. Third, the comedy also   has a serious side, though, as we remember our mothers exerting their   great frustrations upon the household tasks of cleanliness. So,  Mrs. Joe serves very well as a mother to Pip. Besides the age   difference and the motherly duties of housekeeping for Pip and  Joe, the attitude of a scornful mother is also apparent. This, of   course, draws Joe even closer to Pip, by relation. Mrs. Joe serves as   link to make it so that Joe appears very much to be the father of Pip.   In addition, Joe, although terrified of Mrs. Joe, is a very honorable   man and would never consider divorcing his wife. Through this   condition, however, Joe appears to be even a more honorable man to   choose to preserve the sacred marriage rather than seek his comfort.   It is ironic that Mrs. Joe be referred to as Mrs. Joe constantly when   there doesn't seem to much a part of Joe in her. The main purpose it   serves is probably to characterize Mrs. Joe as a more masculine, and,   therefore, typically more commanding, character. In the tradition  of marriage, the wife usually gives up her last name to show that she   is property of the man, therefore it is especially ironic that  she be called Mrs. Joe when it is clear that Joe, rather, belongs more   to her than vice-versa. It is also ironic that Joe be the one that   seems to be stuck in tough situation in his marraige. Often, in this   time, women suffered from the abuse of their husbands and expected to   keep the marriage together regardless. However, Joe is clearly the one   being abused in this story and he also is the only one decent enough   to care enough about the marraige to try and keep it together by   enduring the abuse of Mrs. Joe. Fifth, through love, Joe shows the   audience that truly he is not just a very timid man but a   whole-hearted man. Truly, it takes a loving man to stay in love with   such a woman as Mrs. Joe. No kissing ever took place between Joe and   Mrs. Joe (much less child birth), and it becomes clear to the reader   that the relationship between Joe and Mrs. Joe is a very one-way   relationship. It would seem that Joe cares enough for Mrs. Joe, though   Mrs. Joe never once seems to show a bit of compassion for Joe.  Illustration of this can be seen in Mrs. Joe's numerous dorogatory   references to being married to a lowly blacksmith. Surely, after   Mrs. Joe dies, Joe reflects upon how    
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