Girl by Jamaica Kincaid
Girl by Jamaica Kincaid
Girl by Jamaica Kincaid
Abstract
This paper focuses on the eponymous protagonist in the novel Lucy, written by Caribbean
author Jamaica Kincaid who now lives and works in the United States. The protagonist is a
female immigrant from a Caribbean postcolonial society and this paper will analyze her quest/
struggle as not only a foreigner and immigrant but also as a woman of color in the multicultural context of the United States. As immigrants undergo a physical change in environment,
they also experience a significant change in their identities. Their identities as immigrants are
reconstructed as they assimilate to the political, social, and cultural norms of a group of people
they identify with. These changes are usually influenced by race, class and gender. This paper
will highlight how in the United States, the immigrant experience is intertwined with the Black
experience through Lucys character. More specifically, it will analyze Lucys role as a woman,
her sexuality and her position as a domestic laborer that forces her to take on the identity of a
Black woman along with her Caribbean identity.
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closer observation, they were not at all like
my relatives; they only looked like them
Mariah did not seem to notice what she had
in common with the other diners, or what I
had in common with the waiters (31). At this
point, Lucy is analyzing not just the difference in race, but also social class whereas the
Black people who seem to look like her are
serving the White people who seem to look
like Mariah. However, though their physical
appearances might look the same, she certainly understands that there are only similarities in the physical aspects of their lives,
and that their experiences happen to be very
different. As Lucy has the ability to separate
her Black racial identity from being Black in
America, the people in her environment do
not.
Understanding the role of an au pair, a
foreign girl employed to look after children
and help with housework (OED), domestic
labor consumes Lucy in both the Caribbean
and American world, and this is the first area
where Lucys identity as a woman of color is
doubled. Lucy is introduced in the novel as
a figure who takes on the conventional role
of the helper. While she comes to America
to study to be a nurse, she is also assigned
to take care of Mariah and Lewis four children: I was the young girl who watches over
the children and goes to school at night (7).
Lucy acknowledges her dissatisfaction with
the physical space she inhabits when she describes the room she is given to stay in: The
room in which I lay was a small room just
off the kitchenthe maids rooma box in
which cargo traveling a long way should be
shipped. But I was not cargo, I was only an
unhappy woman living in a maids room, and
I was not even the maid (7). This description taints Lucys image in numerous ways as
she is seen as not just a domestic help, but as
Kincaids language suggests through the reference to cargo, also a slave. The paradox
of sleeping in the maids room without being considered a maid also influences Lucys
tense relationship with the actual maid. For
instance, upon arriving, the maid makes it
very clear to Lucy that everything about me
was so pious it made her sick to her stomach
and sick with pity just to look at me (11).
Seeing Lucy as also a woman of color explains the belligerence the maid has towards
her, whereas Lucys pompous attitude influences the negative response from the maid. In
this case, Lucys ability to disassociate herself from the world of labor, as if she is better than that, gives off an arrogant impression
that the maid does not like because they are
both perceived as Black women in America
despite their ethnic identities.
As Lucy struggles to define who she is, her
Black racial identity becomes problematic
because the expectations of Black women in
America are purposely imposed on her. The
White American women fail to differentiate
the difference between Lucys Antiguan identity and her appearing physically as a Black
woman. As a result, Lucy adopts a nanny-like
image, exemplifying a maternal role towards
Mariah and Lewis children. Without the title
of being mother she ultimately demonstrates
motherly tendencies towards the children, especially towards Miriam. She expresses great
love for Miriam:
I loved Miriam from the moment I met
her. She was the first person I had loved
in a very long while, and I did not know
why. I loved the way she smelled, and I
used to sit her on my lap with my head
bent over her and breathe her in. She
must have reminded me of myself when
I was that age, for I treated her the way
I remembered my mother treating me
then. When I heard her cry out at night,
I didnt mind at all getting up to comfort
her, and if she didnt want to be alone I
would bring her into bed with me; this
always seemed to make her feel better, and she would clasp her little arms
around my neck as she went back to
sleep. Whenever I was away from them,
she was the person I missed and thought
of all the time. I couldnt explain it. I
loved this little girl. (53)
This is considered a false imitation of a
mother-daughter relationship/bond in which
Lucy is playing the role of mother to a child
that is not hers. More specifically, it suggests
that the work responsibilities of Black women
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who because of racial discrimination, lack
work opportunities outside of domestic, care
giving careers.
Harley also discusses how Black women in
America work as a necessity for the survival
of their families (Harley 5). Correspondingly,
Lucy connects their history with the expectations the Caribbean society has of her and her
male siblings:
Each time a new child was born [her brothers], my mother and father announced
to each other with great seriousness that
the new child would go to university in
England and study to become a doctor or
lawyer or someone who would occupy an
important and influential position in society. I did not mind my father saying these
things about his sons, his own kind, and
leaving me outBut my mother knew
me well, as she knew herself: I, at the
time, even thought of us as identical; and
whenever I saw her eyes fill up with tears
at the thought of how proud she would be
at some deed her sons had accomplished, I
felt a sword go through my heart, for there
was no accompanying scenario in which
she saw me, her only identical offspring, in
a remotely similar situation. (130)
The low expectations Lucys family,
especially her mother, has for her comes
from Lucy being a woman. Women within
Caribbean societies are compelled to take on
domesticated careers such as nursing. This
influences Lucys decision to stop attending school to become a nurse. She states,
Whatever my future held, nursing would
not be a part of itI was not good at taking orders from anyone, not good at waiting on other people (92). Therefore, when
Lucy comes to America and takes on another
identity as a nanny, she states I could hardly
imagine spending the rest of it [her life] overseeing their children in one situation or another (110). As a result, Lucy recognizes the
image of a domestic laborer consistently being imposed on her, and deviates from those
practices. That is to say Lucys understanding
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Edyta Oczkowicz discusses this relationship between the colonizer and the colonized, which he illustrates as the transitional
moment of cultural and psychological translation in correlation to Lucy being placed at
the crossroad of her Antiguan identity and
her American identity (Oczkowicz 144). He
implies that Lucy is a mental outcast and
moral convict who refuses to accept what
she is told to be (Oczkowicz 146). In this
case, Mariahs attempt in persuading Lucy
to see beauty in the daffodils initially fails
because Lucy knows from her personal experience that there is no beauty within them.
More specifically, Oczkowicz analyzes the
poem to dictate whose beauty she was told
to assimilate without ever seeing the flowers themselves the metaphor for the act
of the colonization seen by the colonized
(Oczkowicz 146). At this point, Lucy struggles with her present reality as it is a reflection of her postcolonial experiences. Though
no longer living in Antigua, her postcolonial life becomes a reality within America.
Oczkowicz conveys this concept that Lucy
can never forget her post-colonial experiences as it is a part of who she is. Therefore,
in order to liberate herself from her past she
must be able to acknowledge her past during
her present, in which she will always be seen
or identified as the colonized instead of the
colonizer. With good intentions, Mariah tries
to embrace Lucy from an American perspective opposed to a British one where Lucy describes her to be a woman who wanted to
show me her world and hope that I would like
it, too (36); however, the history of Great
Britain and America appear similar as both
countries have been in positions of power/
control, which leaves Lucy still feeling as if
she is the servant in the world of the master.
In an attempt to understand the formation of Mariahs mentality, Lucy does not
inquire about her authority but investigates
specifically how she got to be the way she
is (Oczkowicz 149)- someone who can take
on an identity that does not belong to her.
For example, after catching fish for dinner
Mariah jokingly sings, I will make you fishers of men (37). Lucy does not perceive
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this to be a joke and, following Mariahs
next comment, This is super. Lets go feed
the minions responds by thinking, Its
possible that what she really said was millions, not minions. Certainly she said it
in jest. But as we were cooking the fish, I
was thinking about it. Minions. A word
like that would haunt someone like me; the
place where I came from was a dominion
of someplace else (37). This anecdote also
demonstrates the relationship between masters and their servants. It is a biblical reference in which Jesus, the master, states to his
disciples, the servants, what Mariah says to
Lucy: I will make you fishers of men (37).
Correspondingly, the literal meaning of the
term minion, (a servile dependent) constructs the idea of Mariah being someone who
has great power, enough power to support the
millions/minions. Furthermore, Mariah
then explains to Lucy that she has Indian
blood in her which is the reason for her great
ability in catching fish and hunting: She says
it as if she were announcing her possession
of a trophy. How do you get to be the sort
of victor who can claim to be the vanquished
also (40-41). In this case, Mariah unknowingly contradicts her role of being the victor.
While Lucy perceives her to be the victor
because of her race, class, and history of being the oppressor, Mariah wishes to identify
with the vanquished in order to make Lucy
feel more comfortable. It can also be said that
Mariahs strongest desire is to demonstrate
a sense of similarity in their respective experiences in order for Lucy to see her as an
equal. Because Mariah does not understand
the history of oppression although she is in
some way a part of it, she cannot thoroughly
understand Lucys being both Caribbean and
Black in America. Significantly, Kincaid also
states in her interview with Ferguson that, It
really is a form of theft and conquestwhat
is incredible is how the conquered world
would take the identitywhen people in the
conquering position take things, it doesnt
threaten their identity. But the weaker people
feelthats why they clutch or hold on so
tight and define them narrowly, really leading more to their defeat (Ferguson 168). By
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happened that I had not counted on at all. At
the store where I bought the camera, the man
who sold it to mehe and I went off and
spent the rest of the day and half of that night
in his bed (116). While Lucy perceives this
to have been accidental, she takes pride in her
promiscuous behavior as she planted a kiss
on Pauls mouth with an uncontrollable ardor
that I actually did feel [later that day]a kiss
of treachery, for I could still taste the other
man in my mouth (117). For this reason,
she is in love with the idea of not committing
herself to one man in a physical or emotional
way. Lucy gradually conforms into the stereotypical image of Black women in America
being promiscuous. Opposed to her former
Caribbean society where she could not embrace her own sexual desires, she gradually
invites the notion of being a slut as a part
of her Black American experience.
Lucys lifestyle of engaging in premarital
sex is clarified by Ketu Katraks critique of
cultural tradition controlling the female sexuality in postcolonial societies, which as a result forces women to utilize their bodies as
an act of resistance. Katrak argues, As they
negotiate these institutionalized prescriptions
of sexual behavior, they face no-win situations: obey the dominant code and survive
or disobey tradition, step outside boundaries,
and pay the ultimate price (Katrak 160). By
the ultimate price Katrak is referring to being
silenced or forced into exile, which is where
Lucy ultimately finds herself. From a historical standpoint, the traditional control of female sexuality was influenced by Victorians
ideas of sexuality. More specifically, the
colonizers perceived themselves to be the
liberators of the native women, giving
them freedom from barbaric customs. In
this case, barbaric is defined as being wild
and unsophisticated, therefore, the barbaric
customs can be considered as the notion of
promiscuity. As cultural traditions have been
utilized to control the female sexuality, it also
enables women as subjects to the concept
of marriage, which allows the male to have
dominance. For this reason, Lucy illustrates
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notion of marriage or a committed relationship. The struggle that Lucy endures as she
tries to become an individual ultimately
forces her into a space of having two identities. Lucy is now seen as not only an Antiguan
but also a Black woman in America.
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