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Title: The Tigers Bride by Angela Carter
Description: A2 Level Quotes Ideal for revision
Description: A2 Level Quotes Ideal for revision
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The Tiger's Bride
Quotes
It is a past tense narrative, first person, almost like a diary entry or a recollection
Quotes and Interpretations:
'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
...
*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 Beasts actions as selfish
...
*Not all women have to endure this, some just witness 'silly' behaviour
...
*She uses a rather sarcastic tone to level with him
...
'Not my profligate father'
''The living image of her mother,' crossing themselves out of respect for the dead'
*Doppelganger imagery she describes her father as a beast, which her mother married
...
*Never ending cycle, psychological impact that what happened to the parents may often happen to
the child
...
*She was married for her money, and died because of his
...
*Melancholy being a prolonged sadness
...
'I never saw a man so big look so twodimensional'
*Perhaps she shows the Beast as shallow and unconceiving
...
*Something missing in the Beast
...
'too perfect,
uncanny'
'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
...
*She almost wishes to metamorphosise 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
...
*Her childhood stories are real again
...
'The little black horse trotted smartly through the figured bronzed doors'
'An equine chorus of neighings and soft drumming of hooves'
'The Beast had given his horses the use of the dining room
...
'
*The horses' grand palace
...
*Beauty's that are neither human nor beast
...
*Living in solitary with the basic needs, uncanny behaviour
...
*Does she even want to return to her father?
'A cell had been prepare for me, a veritable cell, windowless, airless, lightless, in the viscera of the
palace'
*Treats her as a prisoner, that a women's secrets must be shown
...
'
*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
...
'
*She has become an animal
...
*In every beauty there is a beast, in every beast there is a beauty
...
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
...
Summary
The
heroine
and her
father
have traveled from Russia to a city in the south, where the
madness of warmth and luxury comes over the father, even though it is still winter
...
”
The father has a gambling addiction, and he gleefully loses everything to The Beast as the
heroine watches, angry and frightened
...
” Her mother died when she was young, exhausted of her husband’s gambling
rose
and womanizing
...
The Beast is huge and bathed in perfume,
with yellow eyes and a face like a beautifully paintedon mask
...
Finally the
father
has lost everything except the
heroine
herself, and so he gambles her
...
The father grows tearful and remorseful, but The Beast roars and
the valet translates for him, saying that the father should have guarded his “treasures” better
...
” Her
father
cries and asks for a to
rose
show that she has forgiven him
...
The helps her into the carriage, and he, like
valet
The Beast
, also
seems like an animal in human disguise
...
She remembers other tales of
halfmen, halfbeasts that had terrified and intrigued her in her youth
...
Finally the
heroine
and the
valet
arrive at
The Beast
’s lonely mansion
...
The valet leads the heroine to The Beast’s room on an upper floor, where
there is a fire in the grate and The Beast is wearing a loose robe
...
In exchange The Beast will return all her
father
’s losses
...
She desires no money unless The Beast pays her what he
would a prostitute
...
The leads the
valet
heroine
away to her bedroom, and she threatens to hang herself with her
bedsheets
...
” He then introduces a
maid
, who is actually a complex automaton made up to look exactly like the heroine
...
” The maid shows the heroine a mirror, in which the heroine
sees her
father
drunk and crying
...
The automaton maid slows down and “falls asleep,” and soon the heroine does so
as well
...
The
heroine throws it aside and the valet leads her to
The Beast
again
...
The valet requests again that the heroine
disrobe, as her skin is special because “no man has seen” it before
...
He buries his head in his arms and the heroine sees
that his hands are tiger claws
...
”
The heroine throws it aside like the other, and then the valet says
The Beast
has requested to
go riding with the heroine
...
The valet leads the
heroine out to the hall where the horses wait
...
They ride out into a heavy wind that seems to follow The Beast as if he can control it
...
The trio come to a river and dismount, and the says that if the
valet
heroine
will not let
The
Beast
see her naked, then she must see The Beast naked
...
The valet covers The Beast with his cloak as he removes his “mask
...
The Beast emerges as a huge, beautiful tiger
...
After a few moments the valet rides off on his horse with the tiger running
ahead
...
They
return to the house and the valet brings the heroine to an ornately decorated room
...
The
heroine
looks in the mirror and sees her
father
looking clean and welldressed and
counting out stacks of money
...
The heroine looks at her own
face in the mirror and then sends the valet away
...
Then she takes off all her clothes, thinking about how unnatural it feels for humans to go around
naked
...
There is no answer,
but the
valet
appears, naked himself and revealed to be a monkey
...
The tiger is pacing back and forth among “gnawed and bloody bones
...
But she goes forward, offering herself, and it seems
The Beast
is more frightened
than she is
...
At his thunderous purr the windows break and the house starts to fall apart around them
...
Layer after layer of skin disappears, finally revealing fur, and the heroine’s earrings turn to
water, and the heroine herself becomes a tiger
...
Note that the machine smiles even though Beauty cannot
...
What are we to make of this resemblance?
That Beauty is not happy in her human form, perhaps
...
The story points towards Beauty’s transformation
being the thing that allows her to achieve happiness
...
VIRGINITY IS A BURDEN SINCE IT CAN BE BARTERED FOR A PRICE
...
(
That
he should want so little was the reason why I could not give it
...
But by the end of the story, her father has been forgotten
...
I wished I’d rolled in the hay with every lad on my father’s farm, to disqualify myself from this
humiliating bargain
...
THE SIMULACRA AND OBJECTIFICATION
Apart from standing in as a lifeless version of Beauty, the maid simulacrum expresses thoughts
about the sexual objectification of women:
…the smiling girl stood poised in the oblivion of her balked simulation of life, watching me peel
down to the cold, white meat of contract and, if she did not see me, then so much more like the
market place, where the eyes that watch you take no account of your existence
...
Themes explored:
● The role of men and women
● Objectification
● Female sexuality
● Criticism of Patriarchy
● Metamorphosis/ transformation
● The Other
● Masks and the imitative life
Intertextuality
●
Beauty and The Beast
Symbols and Motifs
●
●
●
Mirrors
Nakedness
Roses
Title: The Tigers Bride by Angela Carter
Description: A2 Level Quotes Ideal for revision
Description: A2 Level Quotes Ideal for revision