Friday, September 5, 2008

"He" Response 9/4/08

When I began reading Katherine Porter's "He," I noticed that the title refers to Mrs. Whipple's son, a nameless, "simpleminded" boy whose family and neighbors treat as if he is mentally handicapped. Unlike his sisters, Emly and Adna, "He" lacks a name, and therefore, seems less than a son, less than a human being. His mother claims to love him more than her entire family combined, but she treats him as an animal by comparing him to a monkey, taking away his blanket to warm other children, and feeding him his dinenr outside and seperate from the family. While the reader is saturated with Mrs. Whipple's impression that her son is mentally slow, an argument could be made that "He" is not really handicapped, but merely poor at communicating. Plenty of boys love to climb trees and have a low tolerance for pain or "don't really mind [if they get a sting]" from a bee. He comprehends what it means to go to another home and fetch a bull. He comprehends what it means to see and feel disgust for the innocent death of a piglet. Additionally, when his parents send him away to a hospital, he knows and understands what is happening because "he was scrubbing away big tears that rolled out of the corners of his eyes." Perhaps He just had trouble with communication, autism, or a speech impediment that prevents him from seeming normal. In "He" Mrs. Whipple defines her son as abnormal, and therefore condemns him just as she condemns the baby pig before it was ready and grown. The two events parrallel each other in that they represent the sacrfice and destruction of innocence for selfish causes. Mrs. Ripple kills the pig despite the best interests of her family so she can seem well-off when her brother comes to visit. Mrs. Ripple, similarly, rids her home of her son so the neighbors view her as a moral, loving mother, despite His best interests. She wasted two perfectly good lives by sacrificing them for reputation. Mrs. Whipple, could then metaphorically represents some kind of Pontious Pilate figure--Pontious Pilate, even though he knows Jesus is innocent of all crimes, allows Jesus to be crucified because the Jewish mob crowds demand it--- while "He" represents a Christ figure. In the Bible, a capitalized "He" always refers to God or to Jesus Christ. Perhaps, then, Porter, argues we are all Pontious Pilate in nature; we are all ready to sacrifice innocence, and we are all ready to condemn those around us--like Mrs. Whipple condemns her son to retardation-- according to our own standards in order to save our reputation and justify our wrongdoings.

1 comment:

Michelle Wilkerson said...

Wow! I like how you drew a connection between He as a sort of Christ figure, and Mrs. Whipple as a representation of Pontius Pilate. I had not considered how Mrs. Whipple's actions support the representation of He as a Christ figure. I think it is also interesting how Pontius Pilate sold out for a small sum of money, and in a way Mrs. Whipple is doing the same. Now, I am considering how Emly, Adna, and Mr. Whipple play into this story. They seem like central characters because they are named and we get to see what is happening in their lives (becoming waitresses...), but they do not care about He or try to help him against his "Pontius Pilate" mother.