In my blog post for this week, I will talk about
Twain’s questioning of one’s self and identity. He is constantly makes people
think who or what their own identity is. Is it tied to your race? Your
background? Your upbringing? Throughout Mark Twain’s novel, The Tragedy of Puddn’head Wilson he is continuously
switching up the roles of individuals in the novel by using Tom and Chambers
especially. The book is set pre-Civil War when slavery was a booming economy in
the United States. A slave named Roxy, who cared for the children around the
plantation, had a child that looked identical to the slave owner’s child. Roxy felt
like in order to give her child a better life; she would switch the children in
the crib. This meant a slave owner would become a slave and a slave would
become a slave owner. The identity crises that follow in these two children all
stem from Roxy’s decision. Twain uses these two characters to explore where one’s
identity comes from, whether that is nature or nurture. Each character supports
a different side of the argument. Tom supports the side that nurture is
stronger than nature while Chambers represents the opposite.
Tom (originally born Chambers but I will call Tom
throughout this blog) plays his whole life in the role of the slave owner. Everything
that he knows or does is based off of how he was brought up as a white slave
owner. This brings up the debate as to whether his spoiled “white” upbringing
is the determinant actions or is the black blood in him that makes him act this
way. Twain never seems to actually answer this question but only poses it to
the reader in an attempt for them to think about the issue of identity in a new
way. When it comes to Tom, nurture triumphing over nature is apparent in the
way he treats his own birth mother, Roxy. After Roxy is set free from slavery,
she starts working on a steamboat as a chambermaid. The bank she was saving all
her money fell apart and she started to reminisce about her son. Roxy was able
to “put the vile side of him out of her mind, and dwelt only on recollections
of his occasional acts of kindness to her” (Twain, 33). This quote just shows
that how Tom treated Roxy but was this because of his upbringing or some
biological trait?
Twain continues fueling this dilemma in the character
of Tom. He does the exact opposite of Tom. He takes a legally “white” child and
puts him a “black” environment. By doing this he tests whether or not Chambers’
white background will trump the “black” upbringing. Throughout the story,
Chambers is a kind and caring person even saving Tom from drowning in the very
beginning of the story. One would assume that someone brought up a slave wouldn’t
take the opportunity to save their abusive white master but he does anyway. Now
why is this? Is this attributed to something biological? Why would Chambers
want to save someone who treats him like Tom does? Not only this but Chambers
treats his mother or who he thinks is his mother with the utmost respect and
adoration.
In typical Twain fashion I feel he leaves us with
more questions than he answers. Is Twain saying that whites are innately more
inclined to be good people as opposed to blacks? Based off of Twain’s previous
works, I don’t believe he would be in support of this because in reinforces the
institution of slavery which he is adamantly opposed to. What I believe Twain
is saying in reality is that no matter how you’ve been brought up or what blood
you have running through your veins, the individual determines their own
identity. One shouldn’t something as horrible as slavery define you there for
why Chambers is still a loving son. In addition to that, don’t let your
surroundings dictate your actions like Tom fell victim to and became a product
of his surroundings.
Kyle,
ReplyDeleteI liked your point about Tom and Chambers representing nature vs nurture. You bring up some interesting questions about identity and whether it is biological or social, and I think that is exactly the question Twain is posing as well. I think it is a mixture of both, some behaviors we learn and others we inherit and with the right kind of mix you can either end up like Tom or Chambers. If they had been switched, some of their behaviors would have as well. What's interesting though is the impact society has on someone elses identity. The way they expect certain people to act and behave impacts people. It is a strong influence as well. How different do you think these two characters would have been (Tom and Chambers) if the story had taken place in the south, where conditions are more extreme and society's impact is even stronger? Something to think about. I think they'd be different.
I agree with Sabrina when she said that someone's identity is a mix of both, biological and social. Racial identity plays a huge part in the novel. "..Roxy was as white as anybody, but the one-sixteenth of her which was black outvoted the other fifteen parts and made her a negro" Twain, 64). The word choice was interesting saying how Roxy is "majestic". We wouldn't think of Roxy as as a maid, etc. In this passage, we see how society is obsessed with reputation and others identity. Roxy is a funny paradox in the novel; she doesn't believe she is worthy and doesn't display white qualities.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad that you chose this topic to blog about because I believe it is a great option as far as theme topics for the entire book. It encompasses major characters with the major themes. Although I do see you point in that there is nature vs. nurture, I believe a lot of the story comes from more of a nurture side rather than nature. Chambers and Tom both grew up differently but with the blood of their opposite social statuses. I believe that the way you are raised and taught is a true telling in who you will become. The morals in which you are taught, stay strong throughout adulthood and often are mirrored from your parents. "Tom:" is a born black but raised in a white household, who has been taught to treat black slaves as lesser when in reality, he is no different. I believe the strong influence of parents and they way everyone is raised is a strong example for this book in the nature vs nurture case.
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