Revolt against Patriarchal Mores in Daisy Miller
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Department of English
Abstract
In the novella Daisy Miller,Daisy is created as the pinnacle of American
innocence, which is socially and personally destructive but also refreshingly
attractive and charming. It is her charm and spontaneity that attract
Winterbourne, who is the only one that correctly judges Daisy as an innocent.
But because of false starts, romantic posturing, missed opportunities, and
different social backgrounds, Winterbourne and Daisy, who genuinely like one
another, are never able to develop a serious relationship, a fact which
contributes to the overall tragedy of the story.
Many of James' American characters portray an unsettling mix of charm
and ignorance, but Daisy is the epitome of the type. She is filled with fun and
spontaneity, but totally ignorant of social custom and tradition. As a result, she
Comments one blunder after another in European society. It is, therefore, not
surprising that Daisy meets with personal tragedy, and the novella becomes a
social tragedy.
But Daisy defies the patriarchal notion of how a lady of class should
behave, and in the course also puzzles her admirer Winter bourne who stands as
a representative of the civilized society. Her deliberate idiosyncratic behaviors
are her rebellion against the patriarchal mores, morals and prescriptions.