Wednesday, March 21, 2012

“The use of force”- The supremacy of social status

The Use of Force, by William Carlos Williams is the story of a Doctor’s struggle to diagnose his very young patient due to the child’s outright defiance. The doctor is angered by the girl’s attitude towards him because most likely he had never had to deal with such a difficult patient. Most people in that time period considered doctors to be on the top of the food chain (so to speak), they were not usually questioned, just obeyed. After a while of trying to convince Mathilda to open her mouth so that he may look at her throat and rule out diphtheria, the doctor became more and more enraged. He was especially testy with the parents who kept trying to convince their daughter that the doctor was “a nice man”  “For heaven’s sake, I broke in. Don’t call me a nice man to her. I’m here to look at her throat on the chance that she might have diphtheria and possibly die of it. But that’s nothing to her. Look here, I said to the child, were going to look at your throat. You’re old enough to understand what I’m saying. Will you open it now by yourself or shall we have to open it for you?” (Williams, 807) Which perhaps is the most interesting part of the story because this is when the actual “force” in question comes into play, he pretty much confronts the child by saying “or shall we have to open it for you” showing his self-empowerment over her.  Figuratively, he puts the child in her place.