Thursday, September 1, 2016

Breaking the Mold: Teen Girls versus Stereotypes in Young Adult Literature in Gabi: a Girl in Pieces and Eleanor and Park



What traits embody the appearance and personality of the average young adult fiction heroine?  Is she the graceful and lithe sylph, with a simpering expression and voice of a nightingale?  Or is she the powerful, lean, statuesque champion of the dystopian novel?  Fiery haired yet chubby Eleanor of Eleanor and Park and the pale, perpetually hungry Gabi of Gabi: a Girl in Pieces shatter the mold of the traditional female heroine.  Both girls battle enormous odds to overcome society’s expectations of what a teenage girl should be, bucking the constraints of race, gender, and romance.  While the ideal of the perfect teenage girl is a societal construct that few teenage girls can realistically obtain, characters in the Young Adult genre such as Eleanor and Gabi allow girls to reconcile their differences with society’s view of perfection.
            To understand the population reading novels such as these, it is important to gather information on the age levels and maturity of the Young Adult (YA)  literary genre.   The Young Adult Library Association (YALSA), “defines young adults as people ranging from 12-18 years of age…these are generally middle and high school students” (Latham & Gross, 88).  Students in this age group will be the most likely to empathize and relate to the characters and situations conceptualized in this category.  Books such as the two discussed in this paper may seem written with females in mind yet the content and characters meet the information needs of both sexes as the topics described within are common with all teenagers. Also reading such works of realistic, contemporary fiction are adult women amenable to using YA novel as a form of reflection upon their own experiences as young adults.
            It is obvious from the beginning of Gabi, a Girl in Pieces that race and ethnicity are going to play roles in this novel.  With the western world acting as a melting pot for all races and ethnicities, very few teenagers are any one race but rather a blend which may or may not be evident in their features.  Author Isabel Quintero explains that her goal was to examine the life of a teenage girl who lives not within one ethnic culture but stuck “living on the hyphen” as “we’re often pulled in many different directions where allegiance is always demanded” (Arredondo, p. 2).  Within the first twenty pages of the book, Gabi expresses what it is like for her to present herself as a Mexican-American teenager stating: “The other problem with being me—and my Mexican ancestry—is that people don’t believe that I am any kind of Mexican.  They always think I am white, and it bugs the shit out of me” (26).  Gabi needs to identify in this manner with her friends, Cindy and Sebastian in particular, who are of the same ethnicity.  The character is in a crisis of identity as well between her mother being Mexican yet not wanting her to perpetuate the stereotypes of neither the white nor latin race.  Gabi’s own mother was unwed when she became pregnant at age 25 and Gabi’s best friend Cindy inspires the ire of both Gabi and her mother when she finds herself pregnant. 
            Although race seems more an issue of discontent for the character of Park in Eleanor and Park, Eleanor still feels the pain of not living up to the expectations of her peers in her appearance and way of life as a teenage girl.  She is certainly not the pampered princess type portrayed by many a Lindsay Lohan flick.  Her race can be seen within the novel as an expectation she feels she can never fulfill.  Rowell juxtapositions Eleanor another girl at her school, Kim, described as “she had bobbed blond hair and hard, curled bangs, and she was the only kid in the school with a Swatch…Kim was one of those people who never wrinkled” (Rowell, p. 30).  Later in this scene, Eleanor is describes as perhaps having “jungle fever”.   While it is unclear whose racial difference is being pointed out: Eleanor or Park’s, Park responds “That isn’t even the right kind of racist” (30).
            Eleanor’s ethnicity becomes a brighter light for her when her new teacher, Mr. Stessman, mentions the possible regal Nordic ancestors who spawned someone with a name like Eleanor asserting “What a powerful name.  It’s a queen’s name, you know” and later remarking “Ah.  Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine” meant in jest but more notably points out the girl’s inadequacies to her peers (Rowell, 14).  Eleanor herself marvels her shortcomings as she muses how she looks like her mother but not enough because her mother is beautiful as “you’d look at Eleanor’s mom and think she must be carved into the prow of a Viking ship”….yet “Where her mother was statuesque, Eleanor was heavy.  Where her mother was finely drawn, Eleanor was smudged” (17).  Young women who feel that they do not stack up to their peers and those who do not think they stack up to the beauty of their mothers will certainly empathize with these observations.
            Author Rainbow Rowell gives the first glimpse of gender-bendingly attired Eleanor through the eyes of Park as she enters the school bus for the very first time as a new student.  Eleanor is described as “not just new—but big and awkward.  With crazy hair, bright red on top of curly.  And she dressed like…like she wanted people to look at her.  Or maybe she didn’t get what a mess she was” (Rowell, 7).  Eleanor is untraditional in every sort of way and stands out like a sore thumb in her 1980’s Midwestern town.  Not only is she considerably overweight, dwarfing both male and female peers, she is over the top with the grunge-style apparel, wearing men’s clothing in a sea of pink Forenza shirts and acid washed jeans.  Her red hair and doughy white skin are further testament to her flouncing of the feminine ideals of beauty.  Likewise, the character of Latina girl, Gabi, is written by her creator Isabel Quintero to be overweight, much like Eleanor, yet eager to gorge herself on hot wings as she ponders “could you possibly have a heart attack from ingesting so much capsaicin?  DEATH BY INGESTING THE FIERY WING” (Quintero, 2).  She knows the she feels uncomfortable about her size and appearance as she acknowledges in her journal “lose some weight.  It is senior year, after all” (3).  How can these girls possibly be role models for the modern teenage girl?
            One of the draws of the Young Adult genre is the ability for these novels to meet the information needs of the average teenager.  Teenagers universally struggle with their body image and with the perception their peers have of them.  Eleanor and Gabi embody the insecurities of both teen genders within the context of realistic fiction as “students demand books that deal with any topic in a believable way” (Heller&Storms, p.25).  Contrary to the teen models and heartthrobs depicted on teen magazine covers, the average size of the American woman is twelve, with 15 percent of young women wearing plus size attire.  The struggle with body image is real and both of these characters bring this battle home to their target audience.
            It is no secret that the Western ideal body type for a young woman is thin and athletic.  As a result, “being fit, toned, and slender equates to success and social acceptance” with thinness symbolizing “self-discipline, personal order and assertiveness” (Tuffin & Hamid, p. 36).  Both of our heroines have issues with their appearance, classifying themselves as overweight.  Because of this, they also see themselves as undesirable beings that must hide their shapes within clothes not considered stylish by their peers.  Eleanor’s self-loathing is so strong that she remarks that her peers hated her “before they’d even laid eyes on her.  Like they’d been hired to kill her in a past life” (Rowell, 10).  Her feelings may seems extreme, dramatic some may say yet her insecurity over her weight and appearance affect close to 29 percent of girls aged 10-14 who are dieting.  An important fact to consider for Eleanor is that she does not seem to have a choice in whether or not she is overweight.  It is debatable if it is the inexpensive, unhealthy food she is forced to eat (when she is able to eat) or a general predisposition for being overweight which is causing this issue.  For girls such as Eleanor who are in this seemingly inescapable position, “negative body image is a predictor of depression, obesity, and disordered eating and the increasing numbers experiencing distress surrounding body image is disturbing” (Tuffin & Hamid, p. 36).  With many teen girls feeling the sting of rejection due to their weight, it is no wonder that characters such as these become role models to girls who empathize with and root for her as she is just like them.
            Gabi, the heroine of Gabi, a Girl in Pieces, also faces hardships because of her weight yet because she has a strong network of friends, she is able to cope better with this perceived flaw than loner Eleanor.  She is not devastated by the fact that she is overweight and views her chubbiness as more of an inconvenience than a hardship.  Gabi also knows that her weight is a topic of conversation in some circles but as book reviews point out, “she realizes that women’s bodies are public—that people talk about them, objectify them, and do things to them” (MacGregor, p.3).  Her best friends Cindy and Sebastian, dealing with troubles in their own right, are happy to accompany Gabi to Pepe’s House of Wings even though all concerned know that she does not need this indulgence.  It is indeed worrisome that one of the main reasons she does not want the school year to start is because “It’s not like I don’t want to go back to school (because I do), but I also want to lie around and do nothing for a bit longer.  Eat some tacos.  Eat a few more Rocky Road ice cream cones from Rite-Aid…” (Quintero, p. 34).  As Gabi laments her weight and acknowledges that her obesity is not healthy, overeating allows her to deal with her problems in life and love in binging.  As Eleanor does not choose to be overweight, it seems that Gabi does since she chooses to overindulge when many different food options are available to her even as she struggles with the guilt to the point of hiding food under her mattress. 
            Expectations regarding what is means to be a certain race and whether or not one’s appearance is acceptable are not only a concern for teens within their peer groups but also at home with parents or guardians.  These beliefs, when not fulfilled can result in negative parenting which affects the psyche of the child, affecting life at home and at school.  In “The Effects of Positive and Negative Parenting Practices on Adolescent Mental Health Outcomes in a Multicultural Sample of Rural Youth”, social workers studied how parents influence the mood and self-identity/esteem of adolescents.  Gabi and Eleanor had similar family units with at least one sibling and an abusive father figure which dampen their perception of self-worth.  Eleanor’s mother was a model of female beauty despite her poverty and abuse, yet her lack of involvement in her daughter’s life, especially leaving her daughter at the abusive hands of stepfather Richie, caused low self-esteem and depression.  Contrastingly, Gabi’s mother has a greater influence on her identity has a Mexican American and the expectations of her as a Latina young woman living in a White world.    The problems encountered within the homes of these girls spill out into the relationships each girl seeks with the opposite sex as their entire social beings are harmed by their home lives.
            Eleanor’s mind, as narrated by Rowell, is a textbook example of the results of living in poverty, especially in a rural area, and having at least one parent who is abusive as “the stress of rural living is compounded when poverty levels are high and low-income parents in rural areas are at risk of providing in adequate support to adolescents and often use over controlling discipline techniques, such as responding to problems in an abusive or neglectful manner” (334).  The trails endured by the neglect of her mother and the mental/possibly physical abuse of Richie, will fulfill the information needs of teens who may be enduring similar hardships.  When Eleanor is first introduced, it becomes obvious that she was kicked out of the family home previously because of a disagreement with Richie and ended up sleeping in the living room of a neighbor’s house (35).  This is only the beginning of Eleanor’s abuse at her stepfather’s hands as it worsens upon the revelation that Richie is the one who is writing obscenities on the covers of her textbooks.  While these teens may not feel comfortable outing themselves to their teachers or administrators, they will be hopeful and strengthened when Eleanor is finally able to remove herself from the household with the assistance of Park.
            Gabi also comes from a less than perfect home life filled with an overbearing mother, a drug-addicted father, and a brother striving to fulfill every stereotype of the gang-banging Chicano.  This character embodies the mindset of a child with negative parenting skills as “Latino families often value and strictly enforce rules and any adolescent deviation from these rules is commonly viewed as a major transgression worthy of being shamed” (334).  From the start of her narrative, Gabi recounts her mother’s phrase “Ojos abiertos, piernas cerradas” or eyes open, legs closed (5).  Her mother casts a shadow upon her as she was an unwed mother herself and does not want her fate to be that of her daughter’s.  Confusingly enough, her mother taunts her as wanting to be a “white girl” because she wants to go out on dates, which in her mother’s eyes means she wants to get physical with boys. 
            The story of Gabi’s father is a sad one and the admission that her father is a drug addict is even sadder because he is a man who is loved by his family yet is “afflicted” by addictions (23).  It is almost with an air of forgiveness that Gabi’s mother can be viewed because it appears that she is trying to make do as both a father and mother figure in light of her husband’s absenteeism.  Teens embarrassed of their own parents who also feel smothered will feel relief that they do not have a father who is “walking around like a homeless person, looking through garbage cans and hanging out with other people with the same “affliction””(Quintero, 23).  It is enough to make are reader wonder who has it worse—Eleanor or Gabi in the father department.  Predictably, many may see Eleanor as the winner of this horrible competition as it is evident that Gabi has the love of her mother and father while all Eleanor has is the neglect of her mother/father and the abuse of Richie.
            Another interesting similarity experienced by these lead characters is, while missing paternal love, they find affection with male love interests that help fill the gap left by their missing father figure.  More surprisingly, these relationships are with young men strikingly unlike themselves or the fathers they lack.  The flaws exhibited by Eleanor and Park’s Richie and Gabi’s father can be summed up by the boys will be boys mentality which pervades Gabi: a Girl in Pieces which provides an excuse as to why the male gender has a propensity for ill behavior. 
            Gabi’s boyfriend Martin is the antithesis to any other boy she has had a crush on.  He is also everything that her father and brother are not as he is honest, kind, and only wants the best for Gabi.  Martin takes her at face value which is obvious as soon as they bond over Gabi’s favorite snack: gourmet beef-jerky “flown in from Mexico” (107).  This young man also does not follow the recipe of “boys will be boys” as he encourages Gabi to better herself by jogging and working on her poetry.  He does this not to have her lose weight or to become a famous poetic lyricist but more for the catharsis which will help Gabi become the person she wants to be.
            Eleanor and Park’s love affair between Eleanor and Park is unexpected, proving that opposites to indeed attract.  Eleanor lives a life where her real father abandoned her and her mother is content to be the doormat to serial abuser, Richie.  Young adult genre author John Green lauds Park’s parents as “two of the best-drawn adults I can remember in a young adult novel” (Green, p.3).  While Park is insecure over his Korean slim build and floppy straight hair, he embodies the very traits that his girlfriend lacks.  It is almost as if Rainbow Rowell’s two main characters fulfill different gender roles when becoming each others, other half.  When Eleanor eschews eyeliner, Park adopts it as part of his own Emo persona.  Park cannot get over how Eleanor is larger than life, equating touching her with “holding something complete, and completely alive” which is a feeling they only have with each other (70).  Richie lurks in the shadow, hoping to destroy Eleanor who feels “like he’ll get around to me.  When there’s nothing and no one else to destroy” (288).  Park only desires to deliver Eleanor to asylum in Minnesota, accomplishing the task of driving the challenging stick shift of his father’s truck just to get her to safety.
Young adult novels such as Eleanor and Park and Gabi: A Girl in Pieces meet the information needs of readers between the age of twelve and twenty because, while their stories are not the norm in America, they are the truth for many teens every day.  Whether they are struggling with appearance and body issues, race and ethnicity, or abusive or neglectful relationships with family or a significant other, many teens will be able to identify themselves in the characters of Gabi and Eleanor.  These novels are not fairy tales but realistic portrayals of teen girlhood that inspire those facing challenging hardships can find reconciliation with who they are inside as well as outside as they travel the road to adulthood.


References
Arredondo, F. (2015, January 26). 2015 Morris award: an interview with finalist Isabel Quintero. The Hub. Retrieved from www.yalsa.ala.org/thehub/interview-isabel-quintero.
Diaz, S. (2014). Gabi, a girl in pieces. School Library Journal, 60.8, 104. Retrieved from http://www.slj.com/2014/12/resources/slj-reviews-and-resources-for-yalsa-2015-morris-and-nonfiction-finalists/.
Green, J. (2013). Two against the world: ‘Eleanor & Park’, by Rainbow Rowell. The New York Times, March 8, 2013. Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/10/books/review/eleanor-park-by-rainbow-rowell.html?_r=0.
Heller, M.J. (2015). Sex in the library. Teacher Librarian, 42.3, 22.
MacGregor, A. (2014). Book Review: Gabi, a girl in pieces by Isabel Quintero. School Library Journal, November 4, 2014. Retrieved from http://www.slj.com/best-books-2014/young-adult/quintero-gabi-a-girl-in-pieces/.
Quinterro, I. (2014). Gabi, a girl in pieces. El Paso, TX: Cinco Puntos Press.
Rowell, Rainbow. (2013). Eleanor & Park. New York, NY: St. Martin’s Griffin.
Somokowski, P.R., Bacallao, M.L., Cotter, K.L., Evans, C.B. (2014). The effect of positive and negative parenting practices on adolescent mental health outcomes in a multicultural sample of rural youth. Child Psychology Hum. Dev., 46, 333-345. Retrieved from http://download.springer.com/static/pdf/661/art%253A10.1007%252Fs10578-014-0474-2.pdf?originUrl=http%3A%2F%2Flink.springer.com.
Tuffin, K., Hamid, J. (2014). Balancing act: The relentless tyranny of monitoring and evaluating body image concerns. Women’s Studies Journal, 28:1, 34-46.

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