Book Review of Brown Girl, Brownstones
Book Review of Brown Girl, Brownstones
Book Review of Brown Girl, Brownstones
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Washington’s idea that Silla acts as “the avatar of the community’s deep-
est values and needs” (315), for example, fails to recognize the degree
to which Silla is in fact an agent of the community’s desire for cultural
self-destruction. Further, what is important is the degree to which her
desires and ideals work to undercut notions of identity that depart from
white masculinist norms.
Here, I would like to consider how Marshall, a writer usually consid-
ered exclusively in terms of feminist thought, handles the concept of
masculinity. I will also illustrate some significant, and frequently disturb-
ing, connections between certain types of feminist discourse and some
of the more destructive aspects of hegemonic masculinity.2 Bluntly, I
would like to examine feminist treatments of Brown Girl, Brownstones in
light of emerging discourses on masculinities and to suggest that many
versions of the “unquestionably strong, capable, independent, assertive”
(Denniston 16) woman might in fact be subtle re-articulations of con-
ventional masculine norms. The struggle Marshall depicts in Brown Girl
might not be a struggle to resist, but rather a struggle to dissolve racial
and sexual difference into something very like the universalized male ex-
perience feminist discourse generally seeks to deconstruct. The result is
a dubious kind of feminist victory whereby Marshall’s women are con-
sidered strong, powerful and good only insofar as they conform to the
dictates of a visibly performed hegemonic masculinity.
In most contemporary studies of masculinities, hegemonic masculin-
ity is conceived in terms of an emphasis on external factors and a sup-
pression of interior signals. In Manhood in the Making, David Gilmore
imagines a “quasi-global” notion of hegemonic masculinity in terms
of an identity focused on “visible, concrete accomplishments” (36), an
identity formation aimed at attaining “approbation and admiration in
the judgmental eyes of others” (37).3 As such, the discourse of “the Real
Man” marginalizes feelings and thoughts, and feminizes what Roger
Horrocks calls “inner space” (40). It renders invisible signals unmascu-
line and reinforces Jeff Hearn’s claim that “men are constructed through
public visibility” (3). This being the case, a universalized and homog-
enized gender identity develops, one that “debilitates individualism” as
each man “aims to stay uncontaminated by the alleged inferiority of
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cial, terms.5 Despite Ina’s fears that he has forgotten her in his heart,
Deighton specifically locates her most prized memory when he recalls
how they “used to walk ’bout downtown looking in the people window
when [she] was small,” and, far from being a distant money-maker, he
has an intimate knowledge of her tastes that allows him to select a dress
that makes her “smile luminously” (Brown Girl 126, 127). His similarly
subtle and reflective relationship with Selina leads him to buy gift-certifi-
cates for books because he remembers a single moment in the past when
she said she wanted “[b]ooks that would be [hers], that [she] wun have
to take back to these people library” (127). These purchases are hardly
stern or practical and they provoke harsh judgments from the wider com-
munity, yet he risks this censure and buys the gifts anyway because he
knows it will make the girls feel good.6 The precision of his memory and
the thoughtfulness of his choices represent an emphasis on inner space
rather than concrete visible accomplishments, and this compromises his
paternal performance making him more mother than father. His actions
are those not of an aloof, ego-driven pater, but of a doting, other-driven
maternal figure, one who really knows the children, even if he does not
provide the financial resources to give them everything they want.
This being the case, there is something really peculiar about Schneider’s
suggestion that Silla’s main problem is Deighton’s gendered sense of en-
titlement as a man. It is true that Deighton frustrates Silla’s efforts to
purchase property in New York, but his disinclination for Silla’s project
is hardly a matter of his adherence to conventionally masculine modes
of behaviour. The problem seems just the opposite, that he is not manly
enough. Silla’s problem is that Deighton is not hard-headed and hard-
hearted enough to fulfill her dreams (and they are solely hers) of keeping
up with the Joneses. Instead, he wants to buy something pretty for the
kids, his wife and himself. As such, he is too “girly” for his wife’s tastes.
Frustrated that he is passive where he “ought” to be aggressive and poor
when he ought to be rich, she asks “what kind of a man he is, nuh?”
because she cannot situate him in terms of the masculine norms estab-
lished by the rest of the community (Brown Girl 24).
Silla’s question presupposes its own answer, of course. Deighton is not
a very good man according to most conventional standards, particularly
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to dance, her mother is more likely to “take apart this building bare-
handed” than to encourage her talents (Brown Girl 277). Silla applauds
Clive’s mother for destroying his paintings, and thinks of him as a kind
of effeminate contagion, something less than a man. Combining a cri-
tique of emotion with an endorsement of profitable enterprise, she tells
Selina that Clive “ain nobody to be associating with. A man that’s hiding
from work with tears in his eyes” (259).9 To Silla, emotion is not just
pointless, it is an insidious impediment to material advancement. When
Selina suggests that Gatha Steed’s efforts to buy her daughter a nice
wedding gown cannot erase the emotional distance between bride and
groom, Silla’s contempt is evident. “Love!” she says, “give me a dollar in
my hand any day” (104).
Silla’s contempt for inner space, then, is predicated upon an exaggerat-
ed interest in visible concrete accomplishments. The easily observed pres-
ence of the dollar in the hand makes the inherent interiority of love both
unintelligible and useless. Under such conditions, the most visible dem-
onstration of a dollar in the hand is property ownership, and Silla’s desire
to own a house can be read in terms of a quintessentially masculine desire
for “approbation in the judgemental eyes of others.” Not surprisingly, at-
taining her goal demands that she “steel her heart” against any kind of
emotion, which she considers a sign of weakness (Brown Girl 131). If this
is the case, readings of the novel that imagine Silla’s project in terms of
her love for her children need to be re-examined in light of love’s unintel-
ligibility in Silla’s masculine performance. If emotion is what needs to be
eliminated, how can love be the motivating force?
To me, it seems quite clear that Silla’s aspirations are not a matter of
any nurturing desire to better the conditions of her children. She de-
stroys her relationships with her entire family to pursue a dream that
is solely hers, and, because she has no time for invisible, interior proc-
esses, she is willing to see her “soul fall howling into hell” as long as
she can save face in the wider community (Brown Girl 75). Despite
many critics’ hopeful suggestions to the contrary, Silla is neither a loving
mother nor a trail-blazing feminist: she is an old-school patriarch intent
on making money and winning respect at all costs. She feels that “chil-
dren ain nothing but a keepback” in her quest for financial prosperity,
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but critics justify her pathology in terms of a “love” for her children that
manifests itself only in soul-destroying outbursts (30). She freely admits
that she wants to “make out like the rest” (Brown Girl 174) and hopes to
follow her friends into Crown Heights, yet Washington somehow con-
cludes Silla is “forging a path through unfamiliar territory, cutting brush
for those behind her” (312). Quite the opposite, she is following the pat-
tern laid out by her friends, friends who “ain white yet,” but who take
their models of behaviour from the very male world of “big-shot white
executives” (Brown Girl 221).
It is also important to remember that the central struggle in the novel
is not to move a struggling family out of squalor and into decency, but
rather to purchase the house they are already living in. As such, Silla
craves a change in social status, not a material shift.10 The much talked
about children end up in the same house whether Silla gets her way or
not, and any argument suggesting Silla’s primary motivation is to help
her children must account for the fact that the distinction she seeks in-
volves her position in the hierarchy of the community, not her children’s
position in geographical space.
So far, there is little critical recognition that this is the case. Even if it
is true that Silla’s desire to buy the brownstone is disrupted by Deighton,
the validity of Silla’s desire still needs attention, attention that is absent
in almost every treatment of the novel. Critical representations of Silla as
“a perfect representative of the community of black women [who] em-
bodies positive values” (Christol 149), as someone involved in a “fight
for basic survival” (de Abruna 250), and as someone who “is not ob-
sessed with status in the least” (Schneider 70) seem to me to be almost
entirely unsupported by the text. More damagingly, they demonstrate
how Marshall’s critics are unable to conceive of a notion of “success”
outside Silla’s reductive materialism, reflecting the extent to which the
masculinist ethos of capitalist logic has transcended the need for justi-
fication to such a degree that even self-consciously feminist treatments
consider “a dollar in the hand” as an a priori good and interior signals as
unintelligible and pointless.11
In the terms I am using here, Silla is not so much an emblem of cul-
tural resistance as an embodiment of a cut-throat masculinist ethos main-
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taining that, in order “to make your way in this Christ world you got
to be hard and sometimes misuse others, even your own” (Brown Girl
224). As such, she demonstrates both that “success in [the American]
capitalist framework comes at a steep price—the obliteration of compas-
sion, loyalty and trustworthiness,” and, perhaps more emphatically, that
“women stand in direct opposition to the fulfillment of the American
Dream—the ability to make something out of nothing” (Greenbaum
37, 39). Disassociating herself from all feminine attributes, Silla re-makes
herself as a masculine figure in order to pursue her very American dream,
and, acting as patriarch, she demonstrates the validity of both Gilmore’s
claim that “big-balled men . . . tower over and dominate their less well-
endowed and more phlegmatic fellows” (41) and Greenbaum’s parallel
suggestion that “to not be masculine (sans “balls”) is to be feminine” (36).
Deighton’s suffering as a feminized man is an emphatic demonstration of
the validity of these observations. Just as Silla predicts, he ends up “dead-
dead at [her] feet,” while Silla’s brass-balled masculinity assumes control
(Brown Girl 131).12 And, while Deighton is imagined as a deposed god
“stunned” at his compromised position on earth, Silla begins to appear
as a kind of malevolent omniscient being (“you’s God, you must know”),
an association that links her directly to the brutal masculinity of Percy
Challenor “presiding like a threatening god at the head of his table on
Sundays” (Brown Girl 24, 169).13 Admiring Challenor’s ability to elimi-
nate all interior signals and become “nothing but a work horse,” Silla
accepts (rather than critiques) the idea that “those on top got a right to
scuffle to stay there” (Brown Girl 54, 225) because she lives entirely in
terms of an aggressive and competitive world in which the strong control
the weak. Gilmore maintains that “manliness means results” and Silla
sees no need to muddy this exteriority with ethical or moral questions
(41). While Clive’s compromised masculinity tries not “to hurt people
when they’re so damn fragile inside,” Silla (perplexed at the mysteries of
her daughter’s emotional life) hovers over an unprofitable invalid tenant
shouting, “why you wun dead, nuh?” wondering what the old woman has
to live for if she isn’t worth a dime (Brown Girl 254, 202).14
The dominance of this cultural logic and the unintelligibility of all
other modes of masculine performance are also essential to the forma-
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In the terms I am using, the life force might well be aligned with nur-
turing, feminized values and the machine force with competitive “male”
ones. In either construction, the dancers reject Deighton because he
is too interested in things like dancing and not interested enough in
making money. This is a judgment made by a marginalized community
of Barbadians, but, more importantly, it is a judgment for the hege-
monic masculinity of capitalist economics. Because Barbados is “poor
poor,” the island ultimately registers not as a revered homeland but as a
feminized space for the weak and the lazy, a space that is no longer ap-
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propriate for ambitious brass-balled New Yorkers with their eyes on the
big time (Brown Girl 11). When Deighton tries to include himself in the
dance, the worst thing they can think to do to him is to call him a small
time, small islander.16 As he approaches, the voices of the community
“rush full tilt at him, scouring him and finally driving him from their
presence with their song, ‘Small Island, go back where you really come
from’” (150). Not long afterwards, they get their wish and Deighton
leaves New York, not for the small-island of his youth but to be dissolved
into the archetypal maternity of the sea. An absolute failure as a man, he
finally abandons the quest to see his name and lights and renders himself
invisible and anonymous, unmarked even by a tombstone.
Near the end of the novel, Selina reflects upon her past judgments
and on the wisdom she has gained, saying, “my trouble maybe was that
I wanted everything to be simple—the good clearly separated from the
bad—the way a child sees things” (Brown Girl 303). As a bildungsroman,
the novel tracks her journey from childlike certainty to adult ambigu-
ity and toward the end of the book she begins to perceive a world that
is complex and contradictory rather than reductive and smooth. In this
article, I have tried to demonstrate how many critical reactions to the
novel ignore the lesson Selina clearly learns, how critical readings dem-
onstrate a desire for things to be simple and smooth. I have tried to show
that Marshall’s critics want the good and the bad to be separated accord-
ing to conventions that figure gender in reductive and uncomplicated
ways, and I have attempted to show how unworkable those ideas are,
how complicated Marshall’s construction of gender really is. In Brown
Girl, Brownstones, patriarchal authority is not ultimately a matter of
sexual identity or reproductive function, but of hegemonic masculine
performance. Men who fail to measure up to the standards of hegem-
onic masculinity are “unmanned,” while women who visibly perform
a ruthless, “big-balled” masculinity act as patriarchs. Inside a capitalist
discourse that aligns manhood with money and femininity with emo-
tion, biological identities based on sexual difference are ultimately less
significant than visible demonstrations of virility and aggression. In the
end, efforts to situate Silla Boyce inside feminist discourse are efforts to
duplicate rather than critique hegemonic masculine norms, and any de-
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Notes
1 While Marshall has never achieved the kind of critical and popular success that
Toni Morrison or Alice Walker have, she has been a major presence in the world
of American women’s writing for several decades, and was among the first black
American women to achieve any kind of recognition from the literary world.
And, while Marshall’s complicated and convincing treatments of political, so-
cial and interpersonal relationships have not, perhaps, been seen as “socially
relevant” in the manner of Morrison and Walker, she has received several liter-
ary awards and honours, including the American Book Award, the Langston
Hughes Medallion Award and the John Dos Passos Award. In 1990, she was
honoured with the PEN/Faulkner Award.
2 Critical writings on Marshall consist of at least two full-length studies, The Fiction
of Paule Marshall: Reconstructions of History, Culture, and Gender by Dorothy
Hamer Denniston, and Toward Wholeness in Paule Marshall’s Fiction by Joyce
Pettis. There is also a fairly substantial collection of essays and reviews in journals
like ARIEL, World Literature Written in English and SAGE, and in larger studies
like The African American Novel Since 1960, Writing in Limbo: Modernism and
Caribbean Literature, or Mythmaking and Metaphor in Black Women’s Fiction.
As the above might suggest, the critical preoccupation has been with matters
having to do with race, gender and geography. There has been almost no effort
to consider the works of fiction as distinct story worlds, just a repeated effort
to delineate useful, real world allegories from the texts. And, while such a strat-
egy might be appropriate when approaching a more programmatic writer like
Walker, Marshall’s work is not self-consciously instructive in the same way. As a
result, critical efforts to find straightforward instructions are often strained and
unconvincing.
3 Given the global legacy of European imperialism, this “global” vision is implic-
itly linked with a project that figured “whiteness” as a universalized form.
4 Specifically, Deighton is “unmanned” in his effort “to be like” the dominant
white males he encountered in colonial Barbados (Brown Girl 182). This being
the case, his emasculation simultaneously amounts to a kind of re-racination, an
abandonment of the pointless project of becoming white, and his lack of interest
in the Barbadian Association, with its rallying cry “we ain white yet, but we got
our eye on the big time,” might well be read as a rejection of a project he already
knows to hopeless (Brown Girl 221).
5 This is not to suggest that Deighton is indifferent to his children’s wellbeing,
just that he refuses (or fails) to perform the paternal role in a conventional way.
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His insistence that “a man got a right to take his ease in this life and not always
be scuffling” marks a clear departure from the quintessentially masculine ap-
proach of Percy Challenor, who is represented as “a pagan deity of wrath [with]
his children cowering before the fire flaring from his nostrils” (Brown Girl 85,
54). Without Challenor’s aggressive nature or his money, Deighton’s version of
parenting tends toward a feminized, nurturing role rather than a role defined in
terms of protecting and providing.
6 Byerman recognizes Deighton’s distaste for the visible, practical world, observing
that Deighton’s various career decisions reveal an interest in the “abstract rather
than concrete” (138).
7 As bizarre as the comparison seems to be, Greenbaum’s study of David Mamet
and masculinity contains assessments that are more applicable to Brown Girl’s
business ethos than many strained efforts to situate it in terns of feminist or
minority discourse.
8 It is also significant that Silla receives the news of Deighton’s death at sea just as
the radio announces the war’s successful resolution (Brown Girl 185), juxtapos-
ing the demise of a failed masculinity with the triumph of the quintessentially
masculine figure of the soldier hero.
9 She dismisses Ina’s boyfriend’s masculine identity on similar grounds, saying, “he
does give me a bad feel. He’s so softy-soft” (191).
10 Obviously, ownership suggests greater security, and, in some situations, mort-
gage rates can be lower than monthly rents, but none of this ever seems to make
any impact in the novel. Selina’s college tuition is free, and there are no sugges-
tions that life becomes any easier after Silla buys the house. Indeed, insofar as
there are any indications of increased prosperity since the purchase of the brown-
stone, they suggest that all the money has been re-routed toward Silla’s new, and
still very personal, goal of a bigger house in a better neighbourhood.
11 Byerman does recognize that Silla’s joyless enterprise is damaging and debilitates
individuality, noting that, for Silla, “conformity . . . is the measure of success”
(140).
12 Byerman claims Silla’s purpose is “not the destruction of Deighton’s manhood,
but the transformation of his values,” but his claim only makes sense in the
context of an intelligible masculinity (Brown Girl 144). In my view, Deighton’s
manhood is always compromised and it is his distance from masculine norms
that enrages his wife. Silla, as an agent of hegemonic masculinity, seeks to de-
stroy Deighton as a feminized, not a masculine, figure.
13 The link between Silla’s behaviour and Percy Challenor’s manhood is made even
more explicit when Selina speaks to Challenor’s daughter, Beryl. Cowed by the
authority of the patriarchal presence in each girl’s life, Selina rejects conven-
tional gender parallelisms when she says, “I can’t imagine your father ever being
small, or my mother either,” thus figuring her mother (rather than her father) as
Challenor’s closest peer (Brown Girl 59).
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14 I do not mean to overlook the racial dimension of Silla’s hatred here (her rage
that the old woman’s daughter “never once count me to speak because my skin
black”), just to highlight the old woman’s helplessness and, by extension, Silla’s
acceptance of a worldview where the weak are systematically destroyed by the
strong (Brown Girl 203).
15 It is also worth remembering that ideological debates about socialist values are
deeply invested in discourses of masculinity. Socialist values register as soft in the
discourse of capitalism because they admit that the individual agent is vulnerable
and requires cooperation and protection, while robust and “free” competition
reveals the true measure of a man. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s 2004 comments
about the divide between “brave” and “strong” Republican values and those of
the “economic girly man” make this quite explicit.
16 In this sense, the Barbadian community duplicates the earlier behaviour of the
white clerks who ridicule Deighton’s effort to identify with the dominant cultur-
al position. In many ways, the community has turned the calypso into the exact
reverse of the carnival tradition Bakhtin describes. Rather than using the festive
occasion to “express their distrust of official truth” (269) and suspend existing
hierarchies—what Victor Turner calls a “lampooning liberty” (104)—they use it
to affirm white middle-class masculine notions of value, and to further isolate a
marginal figure.
Works Cited
Bakhtin, Mikhail. Rabelais and His World. Trans. Helene Iswolsky. Cambridge: MIT
P, 1968.
Benson, Leonard. Fatherhood: A Sociological Perspective. New York: Random, 1968.
Brown, Lloyd W. “The Rhythms of Power in Paule Marshall’s Fiction.” Novel 7
(Winter 1974): 159–67.
Byerman, Keith E. “Gender, Culture, and Identity in Paule Marshall’s Brown
Girl, Brownstones.” Gender and Genre in Literature: Redefining Autobiography in
Twentieth-Century Women’s Fiction. Ed. Janice Morgan and Colette T. Hall. New
York: Garland, 1991. 135–47.
Christol, Helene. “Paule Marshall’s Bajan Women in Brown Girl, Brownstones.”
Women and War: The Changing Status of American Women from the 1930s to the
1950s. Eds. Maria Diedrich and Dorothea Fischer-Hornung. New York: St.
Martin’s P, 1990. 141–55.
Coser, Stelamaris. Bridging the Americas: The Literature of Paule Marshall, Toni
Morrison, and Gayl Jones. Philadelphia: Temple UP, 1994.
De Abruna, Laura Nielson. “The Ambivalence of Mirroring and Female Bonding in
Paule Marshall’s Brown Girl, Brownstones.” International Women’s Writing: New
Landscapes of Identity. Ed. Anne E. Brown and Marjanne E. Goozé. Westport:
Greenwood P, 1995. 245–52.
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