Paper 05; Module 13 ; E Text
(A) Personal Details
Role Name Affiliation
Principal Investigator Prof. Tutun University of Hyderabad
Mukherjee
Paper Coordinator Prof. Niladri University of Kalyani, West
Chatterjee Bengal.
Content Writer/Author Ms. Aseya Mirza Independent Researcher, Osmania
(CW) University
Content Reviewer (CR) Prof. Niladri University of Kalyani, West
Chatterjee Bengal.
Language Editor (LE) Prof. Sharmila University of Kalyani, West
Majumdar Bengal.
(B) Description of Module
Item Description of module
Subject Name English
Paper name American Literature
Module title Willa Cather: My Antonia
Module ID MODULE 13
MY ANTONIA
Willa Cather
Willa Cather achieved recognition for her novels of frontier life on the Great Plains in work in
works such as My Antonia, The Song of the Lark, etc. She was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for
One of Ours, a novel set during World War 1. Cather grew up in Virginia and Nebraska and
graduated from the university of Nebraska-Lincoln. She was intensely moved by the dramatic
environment and weather, the vastness of the European American immigrant and Native
American families in the area.
Cather spent her early years pursuing journalism and she also taught high school English and
Latin in Pittsburg. She had already begun to publish short stories. In 1912 Cather published her
first novel, Alexander’s Bridge. In 1918 she made the most everlasting contribution to her status
as one of the most celebrated post war American authors with the publication of My Antonia.
Though the narrative of My Antonia is fictional, there are many similarities between Cather’s life
and that of the novel’s protagonist. As Cather did, Jim Burden moves from Virginia to Nebraska
as a child to live with the grandparents, the town of Black Hawk to which Jim and his
grandparents move, is a fictionalized version of The Red Cloud of Cather’s youth. My Antonia is
generally considered as a modernist novel. In the 20th century many authors were concerned with
the alienation from society that resulted from ongoing processes of mechanization and
industrialization. These writers responded to what they perceived as an increased fragmentation
of the world by creating narratives and stories that were themselves fragmented. Cather
participates in this tradition both by creating a novel whose plot does not have a highly structured
form and by idealizing a preindustrial life far from the noise and speed of the city.
PLOT OVERVIEW:
Jim Burden, a successful New York City lawyer, first arrives in Nebraska at the age of 10, when
he makes the trip west to live with his grandparents after the deaths of his own parents, victims of
a small pox epidemic. On the way Jim gets his first glimpse of the Shimerdas, a Bohemian
immigrant family travelling to the same destination. As fate would have it, the Shimerdas have
taken up residence in a farm beside the house of the Burdens. Jim makes fast friends with
Shimerdas children especially Antonia, who us nearest to him in age and eager to learn English.
Jim tutors Antonia and the two of them spend much of the autumn exploring their new landscape.
In late January, tragedy strikes with the suicide of Mr. Shimerda. After an emotional funeral, the
Shimerdas retreat into despair and the Burdens struggle to be as accommodating as possible. As a
result there are hardships that the Shimerdas have to endure. A couple of years later the Burdens
move into town and shortly thereafter Antonia takes a job as housekeeper with a neighboring
family, the Harlings. Jim begins to see more of Antonia once again especially when a dancing
pavilion comes to town and enlivens the social scene. Intellectual and introspective Jim is well
qualified to be the narrator of the story. His thoughtfulness gives him the ability to portray
himself and others with consistency and sympathy and to convey the sense of a lost Nebraska
with an evocative, poetic accuracy, furthermore his romantic nature and strong attachment to the
people of his youth and to the Nebraska landscape give his narrative a deep sense of commitment
and a longing nostalgic quality that colors his story. The wistful nature of Jim’s memoir
highlights the novels emphasis to the individual who remembers it, which Jim acknowledges in
choosing to call his memoir, My Antonia rather than Antonia. Jim is not claiming ownership of
Antonia, he is indicating that the story of Antonia contained within his own mind and heart as it
is of the past.
Over the course of the novel, Jim ages from a ten year old into a middle aged man and grows
from a shy orphan boy into a successful lawyer for the railroad companies acquiring an
impressive education, along the way at the University of Nebraska and Harvard. But inspite of
the great changes in his life, Jim remains a consistent character. He always has interest in others
but is content to spend time alone, he often assumes the role of the detached observer watching
situations unfold.
Jim’s most important relationship in the novel is his friendship with Antonia and the fact that he
allows Antonia to recede in his mind as an abstract symbol of the past is itself a strong illustration
of Jim’s introspective mentality. Although he drifts apart from her always though preserving
Antonia’s special place with greater and greater nostalgia as the years go by. Their reunion 20
years apart is a great step in Jim’s maturity and growth. Captured in the memoirs of Jim of his
younger days. Antonia gradually emerges from Jim’s emotional presentation to her to become a
credible and independent character in her own right. Pretty vivacious and extremely generous
Antonia fascinates Jim. He feels that Antonia is unusually alive a sentiment that he echoes even
after meeting her as the mother of her ten children at the end if the novel.
Throughout the novel, Antonia is caught between her natural optimism and cheer and the
extremely difficult predicaments. She faces after her emigration from Bohemia and her father’s
suicide in America. She is also trapped by the cultural difference that make her feel like a
perpetual outsider in Nebraska. The Shimerda’s go hungry and their poverty forces Antonia to
work as a servant girl. Certain members of the Black Hawk community judge her harshly for her
love of dancing, her fiancé betrays her and leaves her to raise a child alone. Yet she never loses
her inner grace and self sufficiency. Antonia always tries to make the best of her circumstances
but she refuses to sacrifice her independence to improve her life. She would rather work for
the wretched Wick Cutter than follow Mr. Hartling’s orders to stop going to the dances.
Antonia symbolizes the past, possesses a deep rapport with her landscape and embodies the
experiences of both immigrants and the Nebraska pioneers.
While Jim and Antonia are by far the more important characters of the novel, Lena Linguard’s
role is also important for it is she who is with Jim at a critical junction of life: the transformation
from childhood to youth. Also , Lena stands in avid contrast to Antonia, by craving for
excitement and autonomy and refusing to marry any of the men who fall in love with her
beauty and charisma. On the contrary, Antonia possesses a deep quiet strength of character.
Lena becomes important to Jim’s life at the time he begins to transit from childhood to
adulthood. Just as Antonia comes to embody Jim’s memories of childhood of innocence
and purity, Lena , with her desire for sophistication and her brazen sexuality, comes to
represent Jim’s emergence as a young adult. Jim already associates Antonia with a lost past
and invests her with an aura of emotional purity that precludes sex; Lena continues to
become more important to Jim as he attends college, when they are in Lincoln together
The central narrative of My Antonia is a wistful look at the past, the overall tone of the
novel being highly nostalgic. Jim’s motive for writing his story is to try to reestablish
some connection between his present as a high affluent New York lawyer and his vanished
past on the Nebraska prairie; in re-creating that past, the novel represents both Jim’s
memoriesand his feelings about his memories. Even as he sits of the past is that it always
is nostalgia to recollect his past childhood, Jim is grimly aware that the past will never
return, but it can never be escaped from either.
Another characteristic of the past is that memories are always
personal, they only can be remembered from the personal perspective--- circumstances,
places, things---- that they remember from life itself. This is thematically explicit in Jim’s
decision to call his memoir , “ My Antonia “ and thus laying claim to Antonia as a
personal asset, Jim acknowledges that what he is really writing is simply a chronicle of
his own thoughts and feelings.
Several sections of My Antonia preface the novel’s actual narrative
and Cather includes an epigraph and a dedication. The epigraph from Virgil’s GEORGICS
reads….”Optima dies prima fugit…”, a Latin phrase meaning ,”the best days are the first
to flee .”Several critics have noted My Antonia as a bold departure from American
literature of its time, one of the first novels written by a woman to feature a male narrator
and deserving attention to the autobiographical elements in the text. Cather , too , had made
the move from Virginia to Nebraska to live with her grandparents in her childhood days.
The close relationship between humans and their environment is a major theme in My Antonia.
The focus is on the landscape- the natural, physical setting in which the characters live and move.
Jim is especially sensitive to his environment, to the point that he invests human qualities in the
landscape around him. He treats trees as though they were human people thus reflecting in his
words his compassion for nature. And at other times, the landscape comes to represent emotions
or ideas for Jim. He prefers to keep the landscape as something to dream about not necessarily as
something to understand rationally.
SUMMARY OF MY ANTONIA:
As the narrative begins, Jim is ten years old, newly orphaned and making the trip West from
Virginia to stay with his grandparents in Black Hawk in Nebraska.
Along with him is a farmhand, Jake Marpole and immigrant Bohemian family, the Shimer Das.
Upon reaching his grand parents . Jim settles down and accompanies his grand mother to greet
their new Bohemian neighbors. Jim finds a deep attachment to the all endearing Antonia at the
start. He begins to give her English lessons and Antonia loves to help Jim's grandmother around
the house.
Jim reveals an especially strong desire to identify with his fellow human beings across all kinds
of boundaries and differences. The urge to connect is tied loosely to Jim’s mystical belief that a
divine presence is controlling his fate.
Although a growing up Jim increasingly feels alienated from the world. He is comforted by the
discovery that Antonia despite coming from an entirely differently culture shared his belief about
the stars and fate.
Almost 3 years after his move to Black Hawk, Jim and his grand parents decide to leave their
farm in the country side for a house in the city. Jim begins attending school. The Burdens nearest
neighbor are the Harlings a Norwegian family. Antonia too comes to the city and is hired by the
Harlings. Lena comes to visit Antonia, but Antonia is cautious about befriending her as she has a
dubious reputation. Cather , now shifts focus of the landscape and gives way to a scrutiny of the
town's people. She introduces several new characters in a short time span.
Because the farm is associated with the past and the town with the present Jim and Antonia
became nostalgic for their former existence in the country. Even Leena who has an avid
fascination for city life sometimes yearns for her rural family life.
Jim commits himself to a rigorous study schedule in preparation for his upcoming studies.
Antonia spends a few days working for the Cutters, but on the whole it turns out to be a
nightmare so she quits. The dancing pavilion brings out the difference between the sheltered
American daughters and the immigrant working girls into relief. The presence of the dance hall
upsets the established social order. From the distanced perspective of a man writing a memoir.
Jim can look back on his curious social order and analyze it as the natural evolution of the
American immigrant experience. The same girls who were initially held back by barriers of
language and wealth applied the strength of characters acquired through hardship in order to
improve their social status as a result the servant girls of Jim's youth become the property owning
mistresses of his adulthood . The increasing emphasis on sexuality in cutter’s bizarre attempt to
sleep with Antonia reflects his transition. Jim's reluctance to grow up manifests itself most
strongly in his inability to reconcile his emotional and sexual urges.
Antonia too harbors nostalgia for a purer more child like past. She arranges for Jim to meet her
and her friends at the river in a last attempt to recreate old times. She feels an overwhelming grief
at having lost irrevocably the joy of Jim and her shared childhood in the Nebraska country side.
Once again at the juncture, Cather reverts to the majesty of the landscape to provide a visual
analogue for the nostalgia and sense of loss that her characters feel.
One of the main themes of My Antonia focuses on the transition from carefree childhood to
responsible adulthood which is enhanced by Jim Burden and Antonia's being transplanted to a
new landscape and culture. They search for identity, freedom and independence and connections
that will help them to discover themselves and their capabilities. While usually young adults lose
themselves to isolation, confusion and rebellion. This theme of My Antonia emphasis
psychological growth or maturity.
Freedom is linked with friendship, movement, labor, education and gender. Freedom of
movement brings the characters from their previous homes to the opportunities offered by
Nebraska. Friendships are the result of choice. The right to choose, the kind of quality and work.
One does lead to economic freedom. The freedom to learn and improve one's mind provide
personal progress for characters. All these freedoms are present in the novel; pitted against
enslavements attitudes and hardships that inhibit these freedoms.
From its epigraphs a quote from Virgil" Optima dies.... Prima fugit- The best days are the first to
flee and throughout the novel the idea of memory and movement are inextricably linked not only
do the characters change their cultures, home, languages and destiny but new inventions, laws
and policies and social attitudes change American Culture.
JIM BURDEN'S CHARACTER:
Of all the Willa Cather's works, My Antonia seems to contain the most elements drawn from the
author's own life- Cather is thinly disguised as Jim Burden many of Jim’s thoughts and feelings
in the novel were Cather's own thoughts and feelings while growing up. In the introduction
Cather's description of Jim could easily be a description of her. Like Jim, Cather enjoyed visiting
immigrant neighbors she also had a love for the classics and for the drama and like Jim when he
was middle aged she revisited "Antonia" and renewed their friendship. Cather's characters are
usually composites of people she knew. In My Antonia, many of them bear striking resemblances
to friends and neighbors. Antonia is one of the two major characters in Cather's work. They are
closely drawn portraits of real people. The narrator who is Jim Burden himself reminisces about
growing up together on the Nebraska prairie, and his thoughts keep returning to Antonia, who
"seemed to mean the country, the conditions the whole adventure of out childhood" My Antonia
is written by a non professional writer (Jim Burden) who had left his roots and was frustrated in
life and fondly and nostalgically remembers his youth in Nebraska as the happiest time in his life.
Recalling Cather's inscription at the beginning of the book... " Optima dies.... " meaning that "
the best days .... flee first".
Whereas Antonia represents the pioneer, who builds an abundant promising future from a waste
land, Jim Burden represents the established settlers who have grown complacent, superior and
rigid in their thinking. To Antonia, the road to success in life many possible branches; to Jim and
other Black Hawk citizens, these is only one acceptable road. Jim symbolizes the pioneer gone
soft.
Jim's memories of Antonia comprise the main body of the novel. He admires her, is drawn to her
have been embedded in his mind. Cather reveals his keen sensitivity by suggesting that his past
with the parents who have died has been wiped clean and the future is his to create that he has no
limitations. He has exceptionally loving and understanding grandparents.
Jim's sense of conventionality can be seen from the dislikes of hired girls, he does not appreciate
Antonia working in the plowing fields because it is not feminine. His attitude contracts with
Antonia's acceptance of whatever happens as the natural course of events, Antonia is a realist
while Jim is a romantic idealist. At cottage, Jim achieves a greater appreciation of the classics he
compares the people from his own childhood to people in the works of Virgil. He is introduced to
a new world of music and opera, which he asks Lena Lingard to share. Their brief love affair
causes him to neglect his school work and this somewhat parallels Antonia's affair with Larry
Donovan but the circumstances are not so devastating for Jim as they are for Antonia's behavior
and though he cannot deny that she is very important to him. He goes away and will not see her
again for 20 years.
After 2 decades, Jim's curiosity overcomes him and he visits Antonia and her family in good old
Nebraska. Although Jim has proposed materially he seems spiritually empty. This emptiness in
Jim's life is contrasted with the fullness of Antonia's. Although she has not proposed materially
she has a wealth of children and a fully fledged family. Her spirit is freed full and vital and it
remains as optimistic as ever. Through Antonia's family he recognizes that he can come home
again.
ANTONIA'S CHARACTER:
Antonia has a resilient inner strength that drives her to succeed and helps her survive adversity. In
this way, like the plough against the sun, she symbolizes the invisible pioneer spirit. From the
time of her arrival on the Nebraska prairie she believes that a person who works hard will become
wealthy. "Wealth" of course can mean a lot of land and money, but more important here wealth is
synonymous with whatever is rich in understanding and in spirit. On the train that brings Jim and
Antonia to Black hawk, the conductor comments on the young girls’ pretty brown eyes. Later
when Jim first meets Antonia at her family's dugout again he is caught by her arresting unusual
eyes. They were big and warm and full of light like the sun shining on brown pools in the wood.
From the very start Cather is imbuing Antonia with the qualities of warmth generosity and
earthiness.
In the beginning Jim meets Antonia only for a matter of minutes but she immediately reveals her
generosity and impulsiveness by trying to give him her ring. She reveals her maternal nature all
throughout the novel. She makes excuses for her mother's greedy accusatory behavior when the
Burdens bring food but she herself never complains. She looks only for the good and positive in
life. When Antonia's father kills himself she is crushed but because she is a realist she recovers
quickly and takes his place in the fields working beside her brother Ambrosch and picking up
masculine traits much to the dislike of Jim. Later when they all move to town Mrs. Burden
persuades Mrs. Harling to employ Antonia, where she learns how chores are done in a well
ordered home. Because of the Harling's many children Antonia also learns how to be a good
mother.
But Antonia is still very young and impetuous. When she is forced to choose between work at the
Harling's and attending the dances, she chooses the dance and goes to work for the towns
spirituality warped money lender Cutter. Cutter tries to seduce Antonia but she is saved by Jim.
Later she goes to work for the Gardeners who own a hotel. Antonia begins dating Larry Donovan
a good for nothing man who eventually dumps her when she becomes pregnant. Throughout her
life, Antonia does what needs to be done as a realist. In Book 4 Jim meets Antonia beside her
father's grave, he realizes that adversity has caused her to increase in strength and understanding.
20 years later we see Antonia with a large brood of children and a full loving family "battered but
not diminished" as she is the symbol of the earth, of all motherhood, the ideal for which all men
search.
EFFECT OF THE PAST ON THE PRESENT:
As Cather portrays it, one's environment comes to symbolize one's psychology and may even
shape ones emotional state by giving thoughts and feelings a physical form. The river for
example makes Jim feel free and he comes to prize freedom the setting sun captures his
introspective loneliness and the wide open melancholy of Nebraska plains may play role in
forming his reflective romantic personality- it does not create Jim's personality but it at least
comes to embody it physically. Thus characters in My Antonia often develop an extremely
intense rapport with their surroundings and it is this sense of loss engendered by moving beyond
one's surroundings that one occasions the novel's exploration of the meaning of the past.
The most important and universal symbol in My Antonia is the Nebraska Landscape, Cather's
poetic and moving depiction of it is perhaps the most famous and highly praised aspect of the
novel. The landscape symbolizes the larger idea of a human environment, a setting in which a
person lives and moves. Jim's relationship with the Nebraska landscape is important on its own
terms. But it also comes to symbolizes a great deal about Jim's relationship with the people and
culture of Nebraska as well as with his inner self. Though out the novel, the landscape mirrors
Jim's feelings it looks desolate when he is lonely for instance and also awakens feelings with in
him. Finally the landscape becomes the most tangible symbol of the vanishes past, as Jim the
lawyer is distant New York thinks back longingly on the landscape of his childhood.
The plow which Jim and Antonia see silhouetted against the enormous setting of the sun,
symbolizes the connection between human culture and the natural landscape. As the sun sets
behind the plow the 2 elements are combined in a single image of perfect harmony suggesting
that man and nature also co exist harmoniously. But as the sun sinks lower on the horizon the
plow seems to grow smaller and smaller, ultimately reflecting the dominance of the landscape
over those who inhabit it.
IMPORTANT CHARACTERS:
While Jim and Antonia are by far the most important figures in My Antonia, one should not
overlook Lena's importance to Jim’s youth. Cather conjures Lena to contrast sharply with
Antonia while Antonia possess an independence that gives her quiet inner strength, Lena craves
excitement and autonomy, refusing to marry any of the men who fall in love with her beauty and
charisma. Her choice to live in San Francisco is nearly as extreme for someone from Black Hawk
as Jim's decision to move to New York.
It is no coincidence that Lena becomes important to Jim's life at the childhood and into
adulthood. Just as Antonia comes to embody. Jim's memories of childhood innocence and purity,
Lena with her desire for sophistication and her precocious sexuality come to represent Jim's
adulthood. Jim fantasizes sexually about Lena in a way that her cannot about Antonia. Even as a
young man in Black Hawk, Jim already associates Antonia with a lost past and invests her with
an aura of emotional purity that precludes sex. Lena continues to become more and more
important to Jim as he attends college when they are both in Lincoln together. Though Jim never
grants :Lena an exalted place in his memory as he does to Antonia , she is still a pivotal figure in
his growth from childhood to adulthood and given the importance he gives her in his story she
may continue to figure more largely in Jim's dream of the past than ever Jim himself realizes.