Monday, February 22, 2016

Beowulf and its Female Characters

Beowulf is set in a highly male-dominated world governed by wars, honor, and violence. The role of women in this world seems to follow a pattern: either used as peace weavers to avoid warring tribes or used as trophies for show. Men in Old English literature are always seen as the heroes, while women are not. Wealtheow, Hygd, Hildeburh, Modthryth and Freawaru all fall victim to their role deemed to them by male society. Wealtheow was given to Hygemod as a trophy to avoid war, Hygd avoids responsibility, Hildeburh and Freawaru failed as peace weavers, and Modthryth denied her true identity for her husband.
The only female character that declines to conform to gender expectations and embodies male-like characteristics is Grendel’s mother. Grendel’s mother does not fall victim to the patriarchal society and breaks through gender boundaries that were set by men. She challenges the way women are portrayed to be, and she decides to create her own fate. In the past, these gender boundaries were placed by men to show their “superior position” however, Grendel’s mother pushes through these boundaries thus posing a threat to male authority. This is the real reason why Grendel’s mother is portrayed as an atrocious monster. Her overstepping boundaries and not being like the other women during this time period was so unthinkable that had she had to have attributes of a monster.


 In the poem, Grendel’s mother has the role of a warrior: a position that was only seen with men. Grendel’s mother challenges the stereotype of a passive female when she barges into Heorot hall and takes on Beowulf in her home. “So she reached Herot, Where the Danes slept as though already dead; Her visit ended their good fortune, reversed The bright vane of their luck. No female, no matter How fierce, could have come with a man’s strength, Fought with the power and courage men fight with…” (Heaney 101). This quote shows that the narrator is concerned more about Grendel’s mother gender as the most horrific factor, rather than the attack itself. It also shows that Beowulf respects Grendel’s mother enough to know that she is a strong warrior and that he could maybe die by her hand. It seems as though that Grendel’s mother is alienated from the Danes because of the accepted norms of women at the time. The Danes were most frightened that Grendel’s mother had the strength equivalent to that of a man, thus it would be unspeakable to be defeated by a woman.
Another way Grendel’s mother breached the gender boundaries was her involvement of avenging her son’s death. Vengeance is typically a masculine attribute, especially in the Anglo-Saxon period where families had to get revenge (or get paid a fair price) for the deaths of their loved ones. It is surprising how Beowulf or other men never faced consequences for the murders they committed, unlike how Grendel’s mother does. There seems to be a double standard when Grendel’s mother tries to avenge Grendel’s death, which is more justifiable than Beowulf avenging Aeschere’s death (a man who he barely knew). However, Beowulf is shown to be the hero while Grendel’s mother a stone cold killer. In conclusion, the narrator in Beowulf was attempting to describe Grendel’s mother as a woman who possessed masculine qualities and was only evil due to her gender. The power that she had challenged the ideals and norms a woman was supposed to embody during that time period, and so she became something that the Danes could not relate to, a monster.




            

2 comments:

  1. Your observations on Grendel's mother were very well laid out and easy to follow. I agree that the author absolutely had to make her an atrocious monster to follow with the norms on what a woman was supposed to be like during the period. She was a threat to manhood, and anything that falls under that category should be a vile being more powerful than them to not cause them shame, as you stated. Perhaps the author purposely made the other female characters seem more meek and fragile than what they would usually be during the period to emphasize his point. This would make Grendel's mother seem even more demonic and vicious than she actually was, especially considering her motivation.

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  2. I totally agree with you. I hate to say it, but when someone thinks about it, Grendel’s Mother was kind of the first feminist. She broke a lot of stereotypes for the time she was made in. The “mother bear” is a common thing now. Hearing about mother who becomes bitter and angry about their child’s death comes with the death of said child. Mothers that are grieving for the loss of their children can sometimes be found innocent when they attack or kill the person who murdered their child. But Beowulf, upon a first reading, makes Grendel’s Mother sound monstrous. If one doesn’t read too deep into the tale (most people did not when the poem was still told by mouth) she’s just a horrible creature who really deserved what she had coming to her. If anything, Grendel’s Mother was behaving how men would. And isn’t it always true that people can tolerate the way they behave so long as they don’t see it in others?

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