Sunday, October 13, 2019
The Role of Women in Giants in the Earth Essay -- Giants in the Earth
The Role of Women in Giants in the Earth       Ã  Ã   Peter Mangus  Hagen, a large Swedish immigrant carpenter, pushed back his chair, rose from the  end of the long dining table in their kitchen, and announced, "And now for my  dessert--."Ã   He walked the length of the table past his thirteen children  to the other end, bent his large frame down, and tenderly kissed his wife  Maggie, who was fifteen years his junior and mother of those  thirteen.Ã  Ã   As he pulled himself to his naturally erect stance, he  proceeded to thank her for her labor in preparing an excellent meal and in  caring for their home and their thirteen children.Ã  Ã   This conclusion  to the meal was as much a ritual as was the blessing asked in Swedish before it  began.Ã  Ã   And if the "thank you" was customary, so was the bill of  fare, i.e., a large bowl of navy beans, freshly-baked bread and freshly-churned  butter, a bowl of home-canned tomatoes and a bowl of home-canned fruit, a very  large bowl of mashed potatoes, two pitchers of milk, and c   offee for the  adults.Ã   In that household a seven-course banquet was not mandatory in  order to extract a word of appreciation.      Ã       Ã       This Scandinavian never pretended that his building of  refrigerator boxcars for the Santa Fe Railroad in 1919 was more important or  worthwhile than Maggie's homemaking, home management, clothes-making, food  preparation and preservation, or care of their family.Ã  Ã   In fact, it  may have been Peter's respect and high regard for Maggie's "woman's work" that  helped hold together and make easier a loving marriage that encompassed not only  their thirteen children, but also his five children by an earlier marriage.      Ã       Ã       Of course, if looked at realistically, the couple's  division ...              ...probably all women are alike--they have no sense"  (194).Ã  Ã        Ã       Ã       The one important function Beret fulfills is having  children.Ã  Ã   Giving birth to Peder that Christmas on the prairie is her  only noteworthy accomplishment.Ã  Ã   But even then, Per Hansa takes over  and names him with a name that poor Beret dislikes and regards as near sacrilege  (279).      Ã       Ã       By looking at Beret in Giants in the Earth and certainly  by looking at Peter and Maggie Hagen, it could be concluded that childbearing is  the chief item of value in "woman's work."Ã   By comparing those lives  further, it might also be concluded that it is too bad that Beret was not told  more often that she was Per Hansa's "dessert" and that her "woman's work" was  appreciated.      Ã       Ã       Works Cited      Ã       Rolvaag, Ole Edvart.Ã  Ã   Giants in the  Earth.Ã  Ã   New York: Harper and Row, 1955.                       
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