Nineteen Thirty-Seven and the River
Edwidge Danticat and Flannery O'Connor both explore the influence of religion in creating a belief system in individuals who have been disconnected from societies' main stream in their shot stories Nineteen Thirty-Seven and The River. Characters in both stories have been abandoned by humanity and strive to regain their identity through God's grace. Danticat uses a poverty stricken Haitian woman, Manman, who has been accused of being a witch and incarcerated, while O'Connor incorporates a very young affluent boy, Bevel, who has been discounted as a human being and forsaken by his parents to frame their stories. Both Manman and Bevel use religion, specifically Christianity, to help them find an identity under hostile conditions.
Danticat's story is set in Haiti, in a society that is dominated by poverty and superstitious beliefs. Manman is hauled out of her home one morning, beaten by her neighbors, and put in a prison. She is incarcerated as a witch solely on the accusation of one of her neighbors whose child had died during the night. All of the inmates in the prison were woman who had been accused of causing the death of a child by "rising from the ground like birds on fire" (p.38). From these scenes the reader can glean that Haitian justice is random, and that individual freedom is arbitrary. The author shows us a society in chaos, where the citizens live in fear of the unknown and vigilantism supersedes law. It is a culture of poverty where people are so consumed by the effort to meet their basic needs that they have little time to question the statuesque and perpetuate their hopeless condition because it is what they know.
In contrast O'Connor's story is of Bevel, a child whose parent's viewed him more as a burden than a blessing. He is given to a babysitter, Mrs. Connin, who doesn't even know his name. Unlike Mamman, Bevel lives in a world of excess. "In his own...
I longed for a mother with a scarf on her head and a skin so dark that I never would have to be afraid at night again that the sun would ever burn me" (350). It is this sense of personal shame of having a white mother, caused by the teasing of her peers, that perhaps drives the daughter's longing to travel to Surinam someday to meet her extended family
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