Saturday, August 3, 2019
The Dangers of Social Conformity Exposed in The Prime of Miss Jean Brod
The Dangers of Social Conformity Exposed in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie     Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Muriel Spark's The Prime of Miss  Jean Brodie depicts the coming of age of six adolescent girls in Edinburgh, Scotland during the 1930's. The story brings us into the classroom of Miss Jean Brodie, a fascist school teacher at the Marcia Blaine School for Girls, and gives close encounter with the social and political climate in Europe during the era  surrounding the second World War. Spark's novel is a narrative relating to us the complexities of politics and of social conformity, as well as of non-conformity. Through looking at the Brodie set and the reciprocities between these students and their teacher, the writer, in this novel, reviews the essence of group dynamics and brings in to focus the adverse effects that the power of authority over the masses can produce. Sparks, in so doing projects her skepticism toward the teacher's ideologies. This skepticism is played out through the persona of Sandy Stranger, who becomes the central character in a class of Marcia Bl   aine school girls.     Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Sandy's character is even  more focally sculpted than the teacher's favored disciples who came to be known as the Brodie Set; a small group  of girls favored by Miss Jean Brodie in her Prime. The Brodie Set is a  social system and a enigmatic network of social relations that acts to draw the behavior of its members toward the core values of the clique.Ã   The  teacher Miss Jean Brodie projects upon this impressionable "set,"Ã   her  strong fascist opinions. She controls this group on the basis that she is in her prime.Ã   Her prime being the point in life when she is at the height  of wisdom and insight. Sandy pejoratively uses the personality traits and ideolog...              ...t this  small group level, conformity dispels individual judgement. Sandy projects to  us that this kind of social conformity under the pressure of authority, is  to be blamed for many social problems and adversities in the individual  lives of the Brodie girls, and in society at large.        Bibliography     1. Coon, Dennis.Ã   Psychology: Exploration and Application. West  Publishing Company: 1980.     2. Costanzo, P.Ã   Conformity development as a function of self blame. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 14; 366-374: 1970.     3. Csikszentmihalyi, M. & Larson, R.Ã   Being Adolescent.Ã   Harper  Collins Publisher: 1984.     4. Homans, G.C.Ã   Social Behavior: Its Elementary Forms. Harcourt  Brace Jovanovich: 1961.     5. Lodge, David.Ã   The Uses and Abuses of Omniscience: Method and  Meaning in Muriel Spark's The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie.Ã   Ithaca, Cornell:  1971.                       
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