¶ … Aibileen." She say, "Aib-ee." I say, "Love." She say, "Love" I say, "Mae Mobley," (Stockett). Raising other people's children is a strange profession, as Kathryn Stockett points out in The Help. Even if race were not a prevailing motif in the novel, domestic servitude raises poignant questions about the nature of labor and class relations in American society. However, The Help is about race, and therefore, the love that develops between nanny and child in Stockett's book becomes meaningful and multifaceted. The message of love is a conflicted one. Clearly, Aibileen loves Mae Mobley as if Mae were her child. For Aibileen, Mae Mobley is a surrogate child who can fill the gaping hole in Aibileen's heart after the death of Treelore. The love of Aibileen for Treelore is qualitatively different, though. Aibileen knows that as Mae Mobley grows up, she is bound to be socialized into the white dominant culture that will place psychic and social barriers between her and her former nanny. The relationship between Aibileen and Mae Mobley is parallel to the one between Skeeter and Constantine. In fact, Skeeter represents the best case scenario for a white child growing up with a black nanny in the Deep South, because she is someone who develops genuine love and affection for the woman who raised her right alongside her mother. Although the racial barriers persist in society and guide social norms, some women in The Help are capable of cultivating a love that transcends and overcomes prejudice.
Love in the help is expressed primarily in a maternal way. One of the central love relationships in The Help is that which developed between Skeeter and Constantine. Skeeter longs for Constantine and talks constantly about Constantine. Constantine had a more formative impact on Skeeter's character than her own mother did or does. Skeeter's mother is an old fashioned woman who has rigid notions of both gender and race that rub Skeeter the wrong way. Being a good southern girl, Skeeter does not disobey her mother in an antagonistic way that causes friction, but she does rebel and assert her personal identity. Whereas Skeeter's mother has a narrow vision of maternal love, Skeeter develops a more mature vision of love as she reflects on her relationship with Constntine. The name Constantine is symbolic in the book. Constantine represents constant love -- like a spiritual type sof love that Aibileen represents in her well-known powerful prayer list. Through a more elevated type of maternal love, Constantine helps Skeeter forge the identity that propels her eventually to write the book.
Aibileen triangulates that relationship between Constantine and Skeeter. This is at first because only Aibileen knows "what happen between Constantine and Miss Skeeter's mama," (Stockett). Possessing the knowledge of what happened puts Aibileen in a unique position to have some power over Skeeter, a white woman. What happened between Constantine and Miss Skeeter's mama is something that Aibileen is all too familiar with, especially in light of the Minny incident and the accusation of stealing. Throughout most of their relationship in The Help, Aibileen would never consider Skeeter as a friend who she would want to confide in or tell the truth. Aibileen does not yet love Skeeter because she does not trust Skeeter. A maternal bond did not develop between them as it did between Constantine and Skeeter. Yet Aibileen knows Constantine as a friend, and knows what happened to her.
With relationships between "the help" and their surrogate children, love develops with the innocence of a maternal bond. At one point, Skeeter claims that when she was younger she dreaded being separated from Constantine when she was placed at the top floor of the house. Later, Skeeter states plainly, "I miss Constantine more than anything I've ever missed in my life." These outward expressions of genuine love of daughter to mother are contrasted with the way Skeeter feels toward her own mother. Skeeter loves her mother, but her mother represents all that Skeeter is fighting against -- the oppression of women and people of color. With The Help, Stockett presents two different types of maternal love: that which develops in an altruistic spiritual way between the nanny and child; and that which develops out of obligation such as that between the biological mother and child. Few of the biological mothers in The Help deserve any sympathy. They are in many ways incapable of love, with...
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