Saturday, March 28, 2020
Miss Brill By Mansfield Essays - Miss Brill, Brill, Literature
  Miss Brill By Mansfield  Katherine Mansfield's short story "Miss Brill" outlines an old woman's  lack of understanding for a world that she observes so intimately. The story is  told from the point of view of an aging insignificant character, who on this  particular Sunday is cruelly forced to see herself in a different light. This  essay will study Miss Brill's forced development, and the conflict(s) she must  face in this story. The story is so completely the language Miss Brill uses to  describe her world, that it is left difficult to discuss. In fact, the  inclination is to just quote the brilliantly written sentences. The protagonist  on the other hand, Miss Brill herself, is not brilliant at all. Miss Brill is  the audience to a ?play' pretending like she is starring in it, when really  she is barely one of the most insignificant roles. "No doubt somebody would  have noticed if she hadn't been there; she was part of the performance after  all" (100). The woman, likely 55 or older from Mansfield's physical  descriptions, lives her life and thrives in it through other people's  experiences. After all, "she had really become an expert, she thought, at  listening as though she didn't listen, at sitting in other people's lives  just for a minute while they talked round her" (98). Miss Brill's  inauthentic yet darkly happy view on life comes to an abrupt halt when a young  woman loudly insults her, describing her fur as "like a fried whiting", and  then the young man's attack of "who wants her? Why doesn't she keep her  silly old mug at home?" (100). Miss Brill appears to be her own antagonist. So  fictitious is her life, made up of secondhand experience (and secondhand furs!),  that she "imagines she hears something crying in the box" (101) but really  she is just incapable of recognizing the root of her tears, which today is grief  and humiliation. Miss Brill's development is minimal, even after her little  rude awakening in the park. In the story's descriptive beginning, she wanders  around somewhat aimlessly playing her role as the observer. At the  mood-darkening end Miss Brill still appears to be an observer, but this time one  that is close to understanding her own hopeless situation. This time much closer  to the truth than earlier the same day.    
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