speechlessness
Selective
Mutism (SM) is often restricted to children, and the symptoms vary greatly,
ranging from those who are completely mute, and those who speak to some people,
though depending on the occasion. Overall, SM is defined as a childhood anxiety
disorder, and it typically stems from moments of deep distress in the earliest
moments of childhood or is part of the genetic makeup of the child, thus being
something that can be hereditary. According to Dr. Shipon–Blum, “children and
adolescents with Selective Mutism have an actual FEAR of speaking and of social
interactions where there is an expectation to speak and communicate.” However,
there are also children who become mute in the sense that they have gone so
long without verbal communication that they have, in a sense, forgotten how and
instead resort to forms of nonverbal communication.
Amidst
the varying forms of anxiety present in Sherwood Anderson’s Winesburg, Ohio, Selective Mutism also
seems to make an appearance, specifically in the tale of “Godliness: Part III”.
Regarding Louise Bentley, her silence—or Selective Mutism—seem to stem from
aspects of fear. For Louise, the anxiety produced by living with her father,
compounded with the knowledge that she is not welcome there, and then grown by
the lack of acceptance she receives upon moving in with the Hardy family, leave
her with the near impulsive reaction to simply not speak at all. Indeed, Louise
seems to stop talking altogether: “[She] gave up all hope of getting on a
friendly footing with the Hardy girls and went to her own room as soon as the
evening meal was at an end” (38). After this pronunciation, there are moments
in which Louise dreams of speaking, but fails to do so, until she is with her
father’s handyman on the way home—though this moment also gives her anxiety. As
for the Hardy family, the only further communication the reader sees between
the girl and any other member of the household comes in the form of a note to
John Hardy, which reads: “I want someone to love me and I want to love someone.”
When John Hardy offers to love her, though in a way which she does not want
(physically rather than emotionally), and she does not know how to explain to
him her inner turmoil, no further speech is written until after the birth of
their son, David, when Louise explains to her husband that her cruelty via
neglect is warranted because “[i]t is a man child and will get what it wants
anyway….Had it been a woman child there is nothing in the world [she] would not
have done for it” (39). Thus, Louise seems to apply to the idea of Selective
Mutism through the ideas of speechlessness resulting from fear and anxiety in
situations brought on by an emotionally traumatic experience(s) during her most
developmental years of childhood.
Bibliography:
Anderson,
Sherwood. "Godliness (Parts III). Winesburg, Ohio, Electon Press, pp. 36 – 40.
Dr.
Shipon–Blum, Elisa. “What Is Selective Mutism.” Selective Mutism Anxiety Research & Treatment Center, Smart Center,
selectivemutismcenter.org/whatisselectivemutism/.
Excellent analysis of the story and the character's behavior as in some ways depicting SM.
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