Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Artifact presentation: American Horror Story



Description and Analysis
            The artifact that I have chosen to discuss for my presentation is the miniseries “American Horror Story: Murder House”. The show centers on a husband, wife and their teenage daughter who move cross-country to live in a restored mansion, unaware that its former occupants haunt the home. The reason for uprooting their family is Ben, the husband, is caught cheating by his wife Vivian, who then suffers a miscarriage. This show aired from October 5th through December 21st, 2011. The show’s main storyline takes place present day, but the former inhabitant’s stories are told in flashback, all they way to 1922 when the house was built. The two clips I closely relate to today’s readings, “The “Sick” Women of the Upper Classes” and “The “Sickening” Women of the Working Class.
            The readings by Barbara Ehrenreich and Dierdre English, address how upper-middle class women were treated by their doctors and husbands in comparison to their working-class counterparts based on their gender and social class. Any ailment or disorder found in affluent women at the time were traced back their sexual organs or to “the inherent defectiveness of female physiology”. In the first clip, a male gynecologist is examining Vivian. This takes place some time after her miscarriage and the doctor is offering a new hormone that will make her body able to conceive again. Vivian is skeptical and when she asks for the side effects, the doctor tries to sell her on it by using female age stereotypes and describing how taking this drug will “make you feel 10 years younger”. In the clip, I see the gynecologist as a salesman almost and treating his practice like a business trying to sell his “customers” on ways to keep them coming back for more visits. In the reading, the same method was used when treating upper-middle class women. They would be required treatment that would last a very long time and unless it was “corrected” by a drastic surgery, it kept the necessity for frequent medical attention. Upper middle-class women had “the domineering and indulgent physician”, while the working-class women had the Public Health Officer. Working class women were often grouped together with prostitutes and were all considered sickening. At the time, the spread disease was thought to be stemming from the working class.
            Whatever social class women were in, their bodies were under the authority of men. In the second clip, Vivian’s maid, Moira, explains how not much has changed in the way men use their authority over women. In the “Sick” reading, the treatment used by doctors, instilled a “morbid cult of hypochondria” that really made women believe that they were weak also made them more dependent on their husbands, not only financially, but to help them seek treatment. In this clip, Vivian is feeling defeated and feels like she is in fact going “crazy”.

Discussion Questions
1)       In the first clip, the gynecologist says to Vivian: “Your body is like a house. You can fix the tiles in the bathroom and kitchen, but if the foundation is decaying you’ll be wasting your time.” How does this comparison demonstrate the view medical professionals had towards the bodies of “sick” upper-class women?  And how might have a woman’s miscarriage been portrayed during the early nineteenth century?
2)       In “The “Sick” Women of the Upper Classes, Ehrenreich and English refer to the upper class women as the “ideal patient”. What factors might attribute to this classification, and what kind of patient would the working class women be identified as?
3)       Moira’s summary to “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, is described more as a liberation for the female character.  As Ehrenreich and English write, “she frees herself from her prison--- into madness”. Do you see this as a triumph for the empowerment of Gilman’s heroine, or has she been debased and dehumanized?
4)       Do you think the upper-middle class and working-class women of today are still divided in certain ways when it comes to social change?


2 comments:

  1. As it pertains to your question about the poem the yellow wallpaper I would say first that it is a story about the dehumanization of the character. The second thing I would say about it is that in a way the character was meant to be a tragic heroine. This is due to the author trying to speak out against the actual Doctor who was trying to saying the long term bed rest will be benefitial to thw female. This story I believe was anacdotal evidence which falsified his theory about the matter at hand.

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  2. Going along with the idea of dehumanization in "The Yellow Wallpaper", I see the main character fighting men through her own consciousness. The description of a figure trapped in the bars on the walls fighting to get out, ends up representing the woman and women as a whole from this time period. The male dominance presented in this piece is a "reassuring" male that promises everything is ok and that she is worrying too much about her "sickness". The woman is suffering from being isolated from the world more than she is sick herself. The woman is also nameless in this piece. Why would the author intend to do this to the reader? I believe that this is because it indicates that women were dehumanized and did not play a major role in society. They had to listen to men to help cure them of their "sickness" but the remedy was not ideal to treatment men would receive.

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