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Title: Tigers Bride - Angela Carter - Revision Resource
Description: A2 Level Includes Quotes and Interpretations Analysis Summary Settings Gothic Symbols Themes Intertextual References Ideal for revising
Description: A2 Level Includes Quotes and Interpretations Analysis Summary Settings Gothic Symbols Themes Intertextual References Ideal for revising
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Zoe Noonan
English Lit
...
She
is taken to his castle and she ignores beast's requests
...
● Original Tale: Beauty and the Beast
● Narrative Perspective: Mostly first person
...
● Genre: Fairytale, gothic "black as a herse", magical realism
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● Characterisation: Beast a tiger disguised as a man
● Heroine Russian woman
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● Themes: Virginity,innocence, pretence, reality
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● Intertextual References: Beauty and the Beast
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It plays with
gender stereotypes and confronts misogyny
...
Descriptions like 'Through archways and open doors, I glimpsed
suites of vaulted chambers opening one out of another like systems of Chinese boxes'
remind us of Piranesi with the descriptive intricacy and precision
...
sunless, featureless
...
This could almost describe
Beauty’s sisters in the original story
...
Fairy tales were originally moral tales for the young, but Carter uses 'The Tiger's
Bride' to explore ‘the labyrinth of female desire’
...
This story follows classic
elements of the Gothic, set in a foreign "sunless" and "treacherous" place far away,
allowing us to suspend our disbelief and accept the magical happenings of the story
...
Question Two
Angela Carter’s Beauty is handed over by her father as part of a game of cards that he
had lost to the Beast (page 51)
...
involves a degree of passivity and dependency on a man (in this case the father)
...
→
'My father lost me to The Beast at cards'
*It shows how she was bet as an object of possession
...
*Passing on from one male to another
...
This is shown when the main character’s father sold her like
an object to the Beast when he loses in the gambling, also referring her to a pearl of
great value
...
Moreover, the main character has just entered the stage of adulthood that the idea of
being naked in front of the Beast and imagining having (pardon my word here) sex with
him give her the shudders
...
However, as the story progresses, she soon realizes that to be strong and to break the
stereotypical society, she needs to face her vulnerability and weakness
...
I guess this
act strengthened her individualism more and with the help of the Beast, both of them
begin to accept their new own stronger selves with equality
...
*Ominous in the tone of misery, foretells the story to some extent
...
● 'I watched with the furious cynicism peculiar to women whom circumstances
force mutely to witness folly'
*She is describing her father's and The Beast's actions as selfish
...
Zoe Noonan
English Lit
...
● 'What a burden all those possessions must have been to him, because he laughs
as if with glee as he beggars himself'
*She is not feeling fondly of her father
...
*Once again it shows cynicism
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Now she is married to the beast
...
● 'My mother did not blossom long; bartered for her own dowry to such a feckless
sprig of Russian nobility that she soon died of his gaming'
*'feckless sprig' incompetent twig
...
●
'This is a melancholy, introspective region'
*Horror of the place
...
*Introspective reflecting her feelings changing the environment
...
*It may also suggest that is something relative between the two of them
...
● 'Oh, yes, a beautiful face; but one with too much formal symmetry of feature to be
entirely human'
*Features of the uncanny while he is beautifully crafted it is almost too perfect
...
● 'He is a carnival figure made of paper mache and crepe hair; and yet he has the
Devil's knack at cards'
*Looks can be deceiving
...
● 'The draughts came out of the old walls and bit me'
*Relates to The Snow Child
'it bites'
*Objects able to inflict pain
● 'It was cold as hell in the parlour'
*Irony of hell being cold, more of the idea that hell is whatever agonises you
...
● 'The Beast's carriage
...
*Herse imagery for black, she may set us up for an event related to death
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*She almost wishes to metamorphosize to get away
...
● 'My tearbeslobbered father wants a rose to show that I forgive him
...
*Roses symbolising femininity and her blood, may suggest fertility or death
...
● 'If you don't stop plaguing the nursemaids, my beauty, the tigerman will come
and take you away'
*Crossing the liminal from story to reality
...
Zoe Noonan
English Lit
...
● 'and hire the ErlKing's galloper of wind and ride through the night straight to the
nursery and yes, my beauty! GOBBLE YOU UP'
*Three fairy tale conventions Beauty and the Beast, Erlking (death) and Little
Red Riding Hood/3 Little Pigs wolf
...
The walls were
painted, aptly enough, with a fresco of horses, dogs and men
...
*Great care and consideration, well looked after
...
●
●
'The palace was dismantled'
'The Beast had chosen to live in an uninhabited place'
*The care and money for his horses contrast with abhuman nature of the Beast
...
● 'My master's sole desire is to see the pretty, young lady unclothed nude without
her dress that only for one time after which she will be returned to her father
undamaged'
*Perverse attitude of the Beast
...
*The 'viscera' is the stomach of the palaceomen?
●
''Nothing human lives here' said the valet'
*Relates to Doctor Faustus 'why this is hell'
*Is there the possibility now that she is a Beast?
*What is everyone else?
Zoe Noonan
English Lit
...
'
*She will not succumb to his desire
...
● 'I lirruped and hurrumphed to my shining black companion and he acknowledged
my greeting with a kiss on my forehead from his soft lips'
*In love with a horse
...
you must, then, prepare
yourself for the sight of my master naked'
*Alternating plots
...
● 'The tiger will never lie down with the lamb
...
● 'Unfastened my jacket to show him I would do him no harm'
*Returning the act of kindness
*Acknowledging one another
● 'All I saw was a pale, holloweyed girl whom I scarcely recognised
...
*Sunken eyes
● 'All the skins of a life in the world, and left behind a nascent patina of shining
hairs'
*Metamorphosis is taking place
...
● 'My earrings turned back to water and trickled down my shoulders; I shrugged the
drops off my beautiful fur
...
*Changed her shape
...
The heroine again expresses her hatred of objectification when she throws her present
of diamond earrings into a corner
...
When out riding, the heroine contends
that men see women as soulless, just as they see animals as soulless; she says, "the
six of us, mounts and riders bothcould boast amongst us not one soul
...
" For this reason, she feels closer to Beast, the valet,
and their horses, than she ever has to a man
...
Men objectify her
and treat her as "carelessly" as they do animals and inanimate objects
...
After that, he will return her to her father with all of
his property and gifts
...
She says it
is his choice whether he will pay her or not
...
The valet takes the narrator to a room that resembles a prison
cell
...
You are a
Zoe Noonan
English Lit
...
" hen he tries to give her a diamond earring, she throws it into a
W
corner
...
It resembles the
narrator so much that she calls it her
"clockwork twin
...
"
Later, the valet takes the narrator to see The
Beast again
...
For hours after that, she can hear him pacing outside her door
...
The narrator throws it into the corner with the other
...
Question 7
“she is a marvellous machine, the most delicately balanced system of cords and pulleys
in the world”
“her metal heart slowed in imitation of fatigue”
A woman moves in with a mysterious, masked "Milord," the Beast, after her father loses
her to him in a game of cards
...
In a reversal of
the ending of "The Courtship of Mr Lyon", the heroine transforms at the end into a
glorious tiger who is the proper mate to the Beast, who will from now on be true to her
own nature and not disguise herself as a human
...
Angela Carter has used the theme of objectification of women to transform Beauty from
a possession as shown in the title, "The Tigers Bride" to the bestial being she ultimately
embraces, "I shrugged the drops off my beautiful fur"
...
Not only is the soubrette like a doll, but the heroine powders
her cheeks so that she looks like one
...
The
soubrette embodies the vanity and shallowness that characterize society's idea of a
woman
...
This demonstrates that women are thought unable to think and act for
themselves
...
Since she
can no longer submit to society's female stereotypes and she plans to send the
soubrette home in her place
...
Through the symbol of
the soubrette, Carter shows the reader that this view of women weakens their character
and prevents them from fulfilling their potential
...
The
Beast wears a mask to "conceal" his facial features
...
Further on in this story, the Beast
Zoe Noonan
English Lit
...
This shows Angela Carters
feminist views that people must not hide who they really are for fear of society's
repercussions; but may be empowered by doing so, and finally being able to live as
themselves
...
One gothic characteristic that is well represented within "The Tigers Bride" is sexual
connotations
...
This characteristic is
well represented in the gothic genre; as is the loss of her innocence with the "rose all
smeared with blood"
...
Question Eight
Key quotation 1: Beauty's father seems to enjoy losing his fortune at cards: “he laughs,
as with glee” (page 56)
Possible interpretations:
Suggests the absence of any paternal care or responsibility
...
Key quotation 2: On the appearance of the automaton, the valet explains: “We
surround ourselves
...
” (page 66)
Possible interpretations:
Comments on male attitudes to women: they are painted dolls for men's
convenience
...
Key quotation 3: Beauty accepts she must witness The Beast naked: “The lamb must
learn to run with the tigers
...
Implies women must change if they challenge male dominance
...
Zoe Noonan
English Lit
...
This
story explores many aspects of civilization and wildness, as the maid is like the heroine
if she truly became an object devoid of soul and agency
...
The true humanity and life
exists on the threshold between wildness and civilization
...
The valet
urges her not to, as she is a “woman of honour
...
The valet says
that “nothing human lives here
...
The valet then takes the mirror away and
locks the heroine in her bedroom
...
After all,
don't men treat her as less than human because she is a girl? As she puts it, could
"I
see not one single soul in that wilderness of desolation all around me, then the six of
usmounts and riders, bothcould boast amongst us not one soul, either, since all the
best religious in the world state categorically that not beasts nor women were equipped
with the flimsy, insubstantial things
...
When they reach a river, the valet explains that
if she will not let The Beast see her naked, she must see him naked instead
...
When she sees The Beast, as he is, a tiger, she is overcome with
emotion
...
The beast is
embarrassed, so she goes no further
...
Then all three return to the house
...
The Beast has kept his word and is sending her home
...
She strips naked, which she finds to be an excruciating task, as
if she were
"stripping off [her] own underpelt
...
On the way, she
meets the valet, who is also naked
...
" narrator's fur turns into black rats, which flee
...
As she approaches
him, she realizes that he is terrified of her
...
He licks her with his rough tongue, stripping off layers of skin to reveal her
beautiful pelt
...
Question Eleven
The heroine's transformation into a tiger combines the acts of sex and birth into one
...
He rips off her skin by licking her, which can be seen as a sexual act,
but this gives way to the act of birth; the heroine is reborn as a tigress with "a nascent
patina of shining hairs
...
The heroine here, in fact, is claiming
herself
...
It requires the heroine to endure the
excruciating pain of giving birth (to herself) in order to attain the relief and freshness of
being reborn
Title: Tigers Bride - Angela Carter - Revision Resource
Description: A2 Level Includes Quotes and Interpretations Analysis Summary Settings Gothic Symbols Themes Intertextual References Ideal for revising
Description: A2 Level Includes Quotes and Interpretations Analysis Summary Settings Gothic Symbols Themes Intertextual References Ideal for revising