The questioning of her son in the opening lines - “where have you been, son?” - and her suggestion that he looks “unhappy" makes the reader wonder what might have prompted this reaction.
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That the mother’s voice begins the story, however, points to the importance of these interjections. At the beginning of the story, the seemingly random interjections of italicized speech (that of the narrator’s mother) further complicate the already confusing storyline. Moreover, the author’s use of painting and photography in Livvie illustrates how her works of fiction directly derive from the real world visuals she encounters.In response to the second question, the significance of the mother’s interjections at different points in “The Whole World Knows” became clearer to me by the end of the short story. As Welty had often stated, the visual imagery she uses in the story is derived from her travels in the Jackson country area. The systematic, orderly and routine life led by Solomon is visually reinforced by describing the geometries of the house and the yard. She brings this flavor to the short story Livvie as well. For example, as Livvie walks down the Trace, she finds a “graveyard without a church, with ribbon-grass growing about the foot of an angel”…and where “Scary thistles stood looking like the prophets in the Bible in Solomon’s house” (from Livvie, as quoted in Claxton, 2005, p.79)Įudora Welty, being an accomplished photographer, is renowned for her emphasis on the visual aspects of domestic and social settings.
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Livvie, in contrast, is tending toward the opposite view, as the metaphors employed by her illustrate. In Livvie, Welty also subtly mocks the ‘respectable Christian’ image of Solomon, who is portrayed as an old man with rigid, immutable views about the revealed word of God and the roles of men and women. There is also a similarity between the characterization of Livvie and the historical fictional character Persephone, in that both characters journey forth to the surface of the earth, and avert death through the renewal of spring. For example, the Book of Hours’ emphasis on seasonal changes is analogous to to the cycles of human life that is pondered over in Livvie.
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As Welty has stated in interviews, she took inspiration from medieval texts such as the Book of Hours for the writing of the story. The story is also remarkable for the motifs it employs to depict the inner spiritual journey. While this sort of conflict had been well-explored and presented by many feminist writers of the last century, Eudora Welty’s offering is not so much distinguished by the narrative method but by the story’s thematic structure which is “far more complex and subtly adjusted to the ambiguities of actual human experience” (Claxton, 2005, p.78). But thereby, she takes the risk of abandoning the safety and security provided by the husband and entering an outside world where passion may be discovered at the cost of losing orderliness. One of the people whom she meets outside her domestic setting is Cash, the young farm worker, who offers Livvie an escape from the boredom of her marriage. This makes her feel that she is entraped in the relationship. Although the married life provides some personal security and regularity, it lacks in passion. The story revolves around the nuptial life of Livvie, who is married to a much older man, Solomon. This is reflected in the outer atmosphere, where the season transits to spring. The story, in essence is the resurrection of the main character’s life, from the realm of death. The story in question, Livvie, has won both critical as well as popular acclaim. Her short stories are invariably part of twentieth century anthologies released by major publishing houses. Although Welty explored all forms of literary art, she is best remembered for her short stories. But her observations and insights into the collective American psyche during the twentieth century, especially that of the Southern states, would provide the material for her literary works. Born in 1909, she witnessed the causes and consequences of the Second World War, the Cold War and beyond. Eudora Welty has made significant contributions to the cause of American literature.